Hoodsman: The Second Invasion

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by Smith, Skye




  THE HOODSMAN

  The Second Invasion

  (Book 12 of the Series)

  By Skye Smith

  Copyright (C) 2010-2013 Skye Smith

  All rights reserved including all rights of authorship.

  Cover Illustration is "The Battle of Svolder"

  by Nils Bergslien (1900)

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Revision 2 . . . . . ISBN: 978-1-927699-11-9

  Cover Flap

  In the early 1080’s all of the English, including Raynar, are lulled into a false sense of security by the peace and fat times of the anarchy caused by a power vacuum. False because when the Norman duke of southern Italy unexpectedly dies in 1085, warriors return to Normandy and King William uses them to invade England for the second time.

  The largest army that William has ever raised sweeps across England like the Black Death. Raynar sets out to hunt Norman nobility with a wolfpack of men who have nothing left to loose.

  * * * * *

  King Henry’s invasion of Normandy in 1105 fails because of the treachery of French knights. In 1106 he launches a second invasion, this time using English infantry, including bowmen recruited by Raynar.

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  The Hoodsman - The Second Invasion by Skye Smith Copyright 2010-13

  About The Author

  Skye Smith is my pen name. My ancestors were miners and shepherds near Castleton in the Peaks District of Derbyshire. I have been told by some readers that this series reminds them of Bernard Cornwell’s historical novels, and have always been delighted by the comparison.

  This is the twelfth of my Hoodsman series of books, and the last book set in the era of the Conqueror. Please read the first book, “Killing Kings” before you read this book. All of the books contain two timelines linked by characters and places. The “current” story is set in the era of King Henry I in the 1100’s, while the longer “flashback” story is set in the era of King William I after 1066.

  I have self-published twelve "The Hoodsman ..." books and they are:

  # - SubTitle

  . . . . . . . . . . . . William I Timeline

  . . . . . . . . . . . . Henry I Timeline

  1. Killing Kings

  . . . . . . . . . . . . 1066 killing King Harald of Norway (Battle of Stamford Bridge)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . 1100 killing King William II of England. Henry claims the throne.

  2. Hunting Kings

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1066 hunting the Conqueror (Battle of Hastings Road)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1100 hunting Henry I (Coronation Charter)

  3. Frisians of the Fens

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1067/68 rebellions. Edgar Aetheling flees north with Margaret.

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1100 amnesty and peace. Henry recruits English bowmen.

  4. Saving Princesses

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1068/69 rebellions. Margaret weds Scotland (Battle of Durham)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1100/01 Edith of Scotland weds Henry (Battle of Alton)

  5. Blackstone Edge

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1069/70 rebellions (The Harrowing of the North)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1101 peace while the economy is saved from the bankers

  6. Ely Wakes

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1070/71 Frisian rebellion (Battles of Ely and Cassel)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1101 Henry collects allies. Mary of Scotland weds Boulogne.

  7. Courtesans and Exiles

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1072/74 English lords flee abroad (Battle of Montreuil, Edgar surrenders)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1102 Henry collects allies (the Honor of Boulogne)

  8. The Revolt of the Earls

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1075/76 Earls revolt (Battles of Worchester and Fagaduna)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1102 Earls revolt (Battles of Arundel, Bridgnorth, Shropshire)

  9. Forest Law

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1076/79 fighting Normans in France (London Burned, Battle of Gerberoi)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103 fighting Normans in Cornwall (Battle of Tamara Sound)

  10. Queens and Widows

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1079/81 rebellions (Gateshead, Judith of Lens)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1103 Edith made Regent (Force 5 Hurricane)

  11. Popes and Emperors

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1081 Normans slaughter English exiles (Battle of Dyrrhachium)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1104 Henry visits Normandy (Duchy run by warlords)

  12. The Second Invasion

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1082/85 power vacuum, peaceful anarchy (Regent Odo arrested enroute to Rome)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1085/87 Re-invasion and Harrowing of all England (Battle of Mantes, Conqueror dies)

  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1104/05 Henry invades Normandy twice (Battle of Tinchebray).

  * * * * *

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  The Hoodsman - The Second Invasion by Skye Smith Copyright 2010-13

  Prologue

  In the early 1080's there were three huge armies pushing at each other on many fronts in Western Europe. The army of the Holy Roman Emperor Henry was ranging from the borders of Saxony, across the Germanies, and through Alps to Rome. The Normans of Duke Guiscard and Duke William were ranging between the South of England and Southern Italy. The North Sea league was ranging between the North of England and the borders of the Holy Roman Empire.

  The North Sea league was an alliance of Flanders, Holland, Frisia, Saxony, Denmark and Norway, and a precursor to the Hanseatic League of two centuries later. Its figurehead was the new King Canute of Denmark, but their brain was Robert the Frisian, Count of Flanders. The glue that bound them together was that all feared Emperor Henry, and that all were related in some way to Robert's wife Gertrude.

  English peasants were thriving because England had once again become a peaceful backwater. The Norman lords and knights were all deserting England and Duke William to seek fame and fortune with Duke Guiscard in the Italies. After all, the North Sea fleet would eventually put Canute on the throne of England, whereas Guiscard was successfully looting the rich cities of the Byzantine, so why would Norman warriors stay in England.

  Since both of these vicious Norman conquerors drew from the same pool of warcraft, warriors, and wealth, the size of their two armies were inversely linked. Both Dukes were from the same mold. Guiscards proud epitaph reads "terror of the world" while William's reads "invincible conqueror". When a man slaughters a man, he is a murderer, but when he slaughters an entire people, he is a conqueror.

  Canute never did claim the throne of England. When Guiscard beat Henry in Italy, Henry moved his armies north and so Canute was fully busy protecting the eastern borders of Saxony and so the great North Sea fleet sat idle or went back to trading. Canute was eventually assassinated. Of course, if you read history texts, the only thing of importance that happened in England in 1085-86 was the creation of the tax role, the Domesday Book. Such is the fiction of history texts.

  By 1084 every Norman warrior was earning his salt by beating Henry's army, and was paid off by the sack and burning Rome, but in 1085 Guiscard died. The leaderless Normans drifted back to Normandy and to Willia
m. In 1085 William made his second invasion of England to re-establish his rule. It was one and a half times larger than his first invasion, and there was no army in England to stop him from landing. To the contrary he had brought such a huge army to stop the North Sea fleet from landing anywhere in England. To do this he repeated his most successful tactic from the first invasion. He harrowed the English coastline of all its succor.

  This time however, he did not just harrow the North. This time he harrowed everything from Southampton to Dover and from Dover to the Scottish border. Eventually every roof in the kingdom burned, including the Norman's roofs. In the years 1085-86 the Biblical four horsemen savaged the English. The conqueror, mass slaughter, famine and pestilence, and then a long and brutal winter rode across the kingdom on a pale horse. The effect was death on such a widespread and massive scale that it was worse than the black plagues of a few centuries later.

  In 1087 the Normans fled the famine and pestilence they had caused in England and returned to Normandy where William had promised them the sack of a rich city as payment. Rome had already been sacked, so he marched the still huge army towards Paris. He was injured enroute while harrowing the French town of Mantes, and two weeks later died.

  * * * * * * * * *

  By 1105, the incompetent reign of Robert, Duke of Normandy could no longer survive the combined powers of Baron Belleme and Baron Mortain. Henry of England was forced to lead Anglo-Norman lords to Normandy to help do something about the out of control barons. He had to be satisfied with enforcing a peace in Normandy because his French allies proved untrustworthy.

  In 1106 Henry mounted a second invasion, a much larger invasion that included English infantry so that he would not be forced to count on the French. By this time, Belleme and Mortain had control of Duke Robert, but Henry beat them on the battlefield of Tinchebray. By imprisoning his brother Robert for the rest of his life, Henry took over the rule of Normandy but not the title.

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  The Hoodsman - The Second Invasion by Skye Smith Copyright 2010-13

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Cover Flap

  About the Author

  Prologue

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1 - The conference at Northampton in December 1104

  Chapter 2 - The Popes messenger in Normandy in March 1082

  Chapter 3 - A message through John in Winchester in March 1082

  Chapter 4 - Odo's messenger in Flanders and Frisia in April 1082

  Chapter 5 - Odo's messenger in Denmark and Rome in May 1082

  Chapter 6 - The Pope's messenger in Normandy in June 1082

  Chapter 7 - Arresting Odo on the Isle of Wight in September 1082

  Chapter 8 - Peaceful anarchy in England in 1082

  Chapter 9 - The first invasion of Normandy in April 1105

  Chapter 10 - Home again in Huntingdon in spring 1083

  Chapter 11 - Finding John in Peaks Arse in June 1083

  Chapter 12 - Spy master of England in the summer of 1083

  Chapter 13 - Longbows come to Wessex in summer 1084

  Chapter 14 - Hobbling Normans in Wessex in summer 1084

  Chapter 15 - Saving a Duke at Mount Saint Michelle in April 1105

  Chapter 16 - Ferrying Normans on the South Coast in 1085

  Chapter 17 - The second Norman invasion of England, August 1085

  Chapter 18 - Capturing a fleet off Cherbourg in August 1085

  Chapter 19 - The great harrowing of England, Harvest 1085

  Chapter 20 - The last men rescued from Yorkshire in December 1085

  Chapter 21 - The last earl's wife is murdered in Huntingdon, April 1086

  Chapter 22 - Siege of Bayeux in April 1105

  Chapter 23 - Hunting the Conqueror along the Seine in August 1087

  Chapter 24 - Ambushing the Conqueror on the Seine in August 1087

  Chapter 25 - The Harrowing of Mantes in August 1087

  Chapter 26 - The great fire of Bayeux in April 1105

  Chapter 27 - The surrender of Caen in May 1105

  Chapter 28 - The second invasion of Normandy in September 1106

  Chapter 29 - Dancing with wolves in Mantes in August 1087

  Chapter 30 - The aftermath of Mantes in August 1087

  Chapter 31 - The Conqueror dies in Normandy, September 1087

  Chapter 32 - Battle of Tinchebray in September 1106

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  The Hoodsman - The Second Invasion by Skye Smith Copyright 2010-13

  Chapter 1 - The conference at Northampton in December 1104

  "But why did he choose Northampton for a conference, of all places?" Henry asked. "We could have met anywhere along the two coasts of the Manche. What was wrong with Southampton, just up the road from Winchester."

  "Henry, for someone who must know all of your family's secrets, sometimes you are just thick," Raynar said. Few other men in England could speak to the king with such open honesty.

  "Do tell," Edith said leaning forward in her seat to hear more. She had always suspected it, but had never heard it said. She poured Raynar some more heated wine, and pushed at the old pirate's shoulder to urge him to tell what he knew about the Conqueror's family.

  "Well," said Henry, eyeing his wife's eagerness. Perhaps it was a secret that should be spoken of. After all, Maud was one of his wife's closest allies in court. No. He would not say it. He must play thick, and taunt Raynar to voice the secret. "Could it be because Simon St. Liz is the Earl there, and is trusted by me because he signed my Coronation Charter."

  "Oh Henry," Raynar spoke in exasperation. "Maud is your brother Robert's secret daughter. Judith was carrying her before she was ever married to Waltheof. He knows, she knows, Simon knows. Now even Edith knows." He watched a warm smile spread over Edith's face. She was also a secret daughter, so she could empathize. "Northampton is the one fortress in England where Robert feels safe from you. Maud would never turn him over to you, and Simon dotes on Maud and would support her in anything, and hope for your forgiveness afterwards."

  "I would never hurt Robert," Henry said defensively. "Yes, he was a pig to me when we were children, but not without cause. I was a sneak and a tattle tail to him. My only complaint with Robert today is that he is too incompetent to be the Duke of Normandy. He should have stayed in the Holy Land with his dancing girls."

  "Ah, you would not hurt him but you would lock him up. Put him under house arrest, and keep him supplied with mistresses," Edith's words were not a question. "Admit it."

  Henry's silence spoke volumes.

  "Well, he is incompetent," Raynar whispered. "Always has been. Even in the Holy Land. My complaint with him has always been that he never thinks things through, and for a leader of men, that often causes great harm." He was quick to add, "worse, he tends to follow rather than lead. If you don't help him in Normandy then Belleme will frighten him into becoming his lap dog."

  Edith shivered at the mere mention of the name Belleme. So did her two favourite men. Belleme the Devil, Belleme the Cruel, Belleme the Impaler. He was infamous on both sides of the Manche. Henry had battled him for a year before the folk of Mercia rose up and helped him to defeat the Devil. Now Belleme was banished to Normandy, along with his brothers and that vicious bugger Mortain. They had been the scourge of Normandy ever since.

  Twice last year Henry had made surprise visits to the coast of Normandy on his new galley the Mora, a gift from Raynar. Twice he had put the run on Mortain's raiders. Now Duke Robert was waiting in Northampton to discuss the situation with Henry. Well now Robert was safe in the care of Maud and Simon, so would Henry be safe. It was actually a good place to meet. It had a navigable river, the Neme, that connected Northampton through Peterburgh and the Fens and into the Wash.

  The Fens. Edith suddenly tasted her stomach in her throat. The Fens was where Raynar’s ships were based. That was the English side of his Flanders trade. He had ships and men
all over the Fens. Raynar's men. Frisians. Bowmen. Hoodsmen. Men who had lived outside of Norman law, since, well, always. Men who had joined Raynar's wolfpacks during the Ely Rebellion against Henry's father, the Conqueror.

  "Ray," she said putting a hand on his. "Henry and Robert will be safe when they travel through the Fens, won't they? Please."

  "I take it you want me to go there too." Raynar grumbled. The Fens were not his favourite place in December. Cold and damp and foggy. Very damp. "Very well, so long as we go by ship, and not by horse. I just can't do those long horse rides anymore."

  "When could you ever," she teased. "For a man who has spent so much time on a horse, you are a terrible rider."

  "Just like every sea captain. The movement of a horse is different from a ship."

  "Should we take the Mora?" Henry asked.

  "No. It's not a ship for a small river, not with those outrigger oar decks. Besides, it is in Southampton. We'll take one of my coastal cogs. There should be a few at the London docks at Queenhithe."

  "May I come?" Edith asked brightly.

  "No," the men both chimed together. A coastal cog was no place for a queen, and besides, someone had to run the English court while Henry was away.

  * * * * *

  The rugged little ship rowed past the grand Abbey at Peterburgh without stopping. If Henry wanted to visit it, he could do so on the way back. Going upstream the king was more secure if no one knew he was traveling along this narrow winding river.

  Raynar had chosen a cog that frequently traded with Northampton. A known ship, even out of the trading season, would cause less of a stir amongst the half wild men who made their life along this river and in the marsh land on either side of it. He wanted no stray arrows snuffing out Henry's future.

  He had worked hard for four years to keep Henry on the throne. Though a Norman, Henry was the best chance that English folk had for peace and a good life. His Coronation Charter had been despised and vilified by the Norman barons, which was as good a reference as any king could have as far as most Englishmen were concerned. It had promised a return to rule by law, and a law that reverted to English in-common law, administered by moot courts of elders. It had promised a winding down of serfdom and slavery. It had promised protection for women.

 

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