‘But sire-’
‘Silence! I’ll not hear any more of your excuses. You are my regent no longer. You may go.’
Reynald did not move. His face shaded red and his hands balled into fists.
‘I said, go,’ Baldwin repeated. ‘Or shall I have the guards show you out?’
Reynald gave a perfunctory bow and stormed from the tent, followed by his men. Baldwin went to a stool and sat, slumping forward with his elbows on his knees. John suddenly remembered how ill the king was. ‘A doctor!’ he shouted. ‘Bring the King’s doctor!’
‘I am well, John,’ Baldwin replied. ‘Only bring me some water.’
John poured a glass and handed it to the king. ‘What now?’ he asked. ‘Who shall you appoint as regent?’
‘No one. I shall rule alone.’
‘Your mother will not like it, sire.’
‘She will have no choice.’ Baldwin grinned. ‘You heard the men; I am the saviour of Jerusalem, John. She dare not oppose me now.’
Night had fallen but Yusuf stumbled on in the dark, tripping frequently over rocks, thorny shrubs tearing at his tunic. He glanced up at the stars to orient himself, then continued, walking south along the floor of a wadi, his boots sucking in the mud. His knee ached and he longed for sleep. But the night was chill, and if he stopped he would suffer from the cold. Worse, the Franks might find him.
He had escaped from the field of battle and retreated into the hills. As he walked south he had seen the occasional corpse of one of his men, but he had met no one living. He did not know how far the Franks would pursue his men, but he did not plan to find out. He would keep on the move for as long as he could. A hundred miles of desert lay between him and Farama, the easternmost outpost in Egypt, but he would find a way to cross it. He had to.
The moon rose to bathe the landscape in silvery light, and Yusuf moved more surely now that he could see his footing. But he was tired, so very tired. The sky was just beginning to lighten when he collapsed, unable to go any further. He fell asleep instantly, despite the cold that tinged his lips blue and left him shivering.
He awoke blinking against bright sunlight. He rose stiffly and gingerly put weight on his injured knee. He was in a hollow between two hills, the bases of which were lined with low, scrubby trees. Not twenty feet away a camel stood chewing its cud. It had a harness on its back to carry supplies, but whatever its cargo had been, it was gone now. Yusuf guessed that the camel had escaped from the baggage train during the battle. The lead rope that hung from its head had become tangled in the branches of one of the trees. The camel tugged on the rope for a moment but could not break free. It ceased struggling and resumed chewing its cud.
Yusuf edged towards the beast. ‘Easy, friend,’ he said softly. ‘Easy.’
The camel regarded him impassively. Yusuf patted its neck while he untangled the rope. When he had freed it from the branches he led the camel a few feet away. ‘La-that!’ Yusuf commanded, and the camel knelt. Yusuf swung on to its back, the lead rope still in his hand. ‘Fauq!’ The camel lifted its back legs, then its front. Yusuf flicked the lead rope. ‘Yalla!’ he called, and the camel moved off.
By noon he had left the hills behind and entered amongst the towering dunes of the Sinai desert. It was autumn, and the brutal, ovenlike heat of the Sinai was gone. But the desert was still hot, and sweat was soon dripping from Yusuf’s forehead. He tore a piece of fabric from the hem of his tunic and wrapped it around his head to keep off the sun. He could do nothing about his lack of water. He had had no food or drink for more than a day. By the time the sun set his mouth was sticky and dry, and he had developed a dull headache. That night he huddled next to the camel for warmth.
He rode under a bright sun the following day. Each time he reached the crest of one of the towering dunes, he hoped to see some sign of his men. He saw nothing. The pain in his head was worse now. It felt like a nail being driven ever deeper into his brain. His throat was parched and his lips were cracked. It became difficult to focus on the path ahead, and he began to nod off, sleeping while sitting upright. Near evening, while climbing a steep dune, he slumped from the camel’s back, waking with a start as he hit the sand. He found himself rolling down the slope. He spread his arms and legs and slid to a stop. The camel was thirty yards off. It looked back at him for a moment before it trotted away.
‘Wait!’ Yusuf shouted hoarsely. The words were hard to force through his dry throat. ‘Waqqaf!’
The camel disappeared over the shoulder of the dune. Yusuf rose and stumbled after it. When he reached the crest there was no sign of the beast. He followed its tracks. It was difficult walking in the shifting sand. His knee ached. He was dizzy with thirst and exhaustion. Eventually he lost the camel’s tracks. He staggered on until sunset, when his legs buckled. He slumped down on the warm sand and fell asleep.
‘Yusuf!’
He awoke with a start. It was nearly dark, and a figure stood before him in the twilight. It was a thin man, straight-backed and with short, greying hair. Yusuf blinked and sat up straight. ‘Father?’
The man nodded. ‘You disappoint me, Son.’
‘I am sorry, Father.’ Yusuf felt a sudden overwhelming shame for having ordered his father’s death. ‘Forgive me.’
Ayub waved away his plea. ‘My death is not important.’
Yusuf frowned, trying to marshal his fuzzy thoughts. ‘Why have you come back?’
‘You have betrayed the faith, Yusuf. You have strayed from the path set out for you by Allah.’
‘It is not my fault. Turan-’
‘His incompetence is no excuse. You put too much faith in your friends and family, my son. If they fail, you must push them aside. Nothing must stand in the way of driving out the Franks. That is all that matters. There can be no peace with the Franks. They are a pestilence. They must be eliminated.’
A pestilence. Yusuf thought of John. Not all Franks were evil.
‘Even your friend has betrayed you to save his own,’ his father said as if in reply to Yusuf’s thoughts. ‘You cannot trust the Franks. You must drive them into the sea. Allah has spared you for this purpose, my son. Do not fail him.’
Yusuf nodded. ‘I understand, Father.’
Ayub turned and walked away.
‘Wait! Father!’ Yusuf rose and stumbled after him. He gained on his father. He reached out to touch him, then collided with him. Yusuf felt himself falling backwards, but strong hands caught him and lowered him gently to the sand.
‘Father,’ he whispered.
‘It is I, Malik. Qaraqush.’
Yusuf blinked. The grizzled mamluk was leaning over him. ‘Are you well, Saladin?’
‘Allah,’ Yusuf breathed, his voice rasping in his dry throat.
Qaraqush turned away. ‘Water!’ he called. A moment later he held a waterskin to Yusuf’s lips. Yusuf drank greedily, the cool water a blessed relief. ‘Are you well, Malik?’ Qaraqush asked again.
Yusuf nodded, and when he spoke his voice was firm. ‘I have seen the will of Allah.’
DECEMBER 1177: CAIRO
Yusuf rode up to the gates of Cairo at the head of two-dozen mamluks. Qaraqush had told him that after the battle these were all the men he had managed to gather. Thousands had been killed by the Franks or lost in the desert as they struggled back to Egypt. Yusuf’s mighty army had vanished like the morning dew under the hot sun.
When the guards at the gate saw Yusuf, they paled. The mouth of one of the men opened, but he was unable to speak.
‘What is it, man?’ Qaraqush demanded. ‘You look as if you had seen a ghost.’
‘You live, Malik,’ the guard managed. He knelt.
‘Allah has spared me,’ Yusuf told him.
The word spread quickly. As he rode through the streets, people came running. They called his name. ‘Saladin! Saladin! Malik! Malik!’ By the time he reached the palace a crowd surrounded him. They parted, allowing Yusuf to enter. He found Selim waiting and Ubadah at his side. Both wore the indigo robe of men in mourning.