Saturday, January 19, 2013

Vagabond by Bernard Cornwell

Vagabond: The Grail Quest Series, Volume II by Bernard Cornwell - 405 pages

In the second volume in Cornwall's series about the Hundred Years War, Thomas of Hookton is sent back to England to follow the tenuous clues linking his father to the mystery of the Holy Grail. On his way to speak to an elderly monk in Durham who once knew Thomas' father, he is drawn into the battle to defend the city from an invading Scots army. The Scots King, David Bruce, allied with the French King Philip by their shared antipathy for the English, has agreed to strike England from the north while the English king is preoccupied with his siege of Calais.

But the northern English lords, left to guard the border against just such a contingency, hastily assemble in defense of Durham. Thomas, alternating between doubt and fear that there is any truth to this tale of his father's connection with the Grail, joins the other archers defending Durham in a bloody but ultimately successful battle to repulse the Scots. The Scots King is taken along with several of his nobles, a rich source of ransom for their English captors.

But while Thomas was embroiled in the battle, a sinister Dominican priest and the mysterious Harlequin, revealed to be Thomas' cousin, Guy de Vexille, have silenced the monk and murdered two of Thomas' companions. Now Thomas, and a new and unlikely companion with his own losses to avenge, set out to track down their enemies and rescue Christendom's holiest relic. Their quest leads them back to Hookton, where Thomas finds his father had left him a bequest, a book that seems to confirm the Grail's existence. But do these strange tales written by Thomas' father provide some kind of cryptic clues to where it lies hidden?  When Thomas seeks help in deciphering these clues he falls into the hands of the Dominican and the Inquisition. Broken by the torture, Thomas is near death when his friends ransom him from the Inquisitor. The price of his freedom is his father's book.

Thomas finds himself back in La Roche-Derrien, slowly recuperating from his wounds, both physical and mental. Then Philip of Blois, Duke of Brittany, launches his campaign to drive the English occupation forces out of Brittany. Philip believes he has found a strategy to neutralize the English longbows in battle. He will begin by besieging the English garrison at La Roche-Derrien. Once again Thomas prepares to meet his enemies in battle.


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