They had reached the walled city of Vitry.
There was little defence offered and in a short time the King’s men were in the streets killing, pillaging, shedding the blood of its inhabitants. The old and the maimed and the women and the children ran screaming before the soldiers and barricaded themselves into the wooden church.
‘Enough, enough,’ cried Louis. But his command was not heeded.
His followers had come to pillage and murder and they could not be restrained. There then occurred a terrible incident which was to haunt the King for the rest of his days.
Inside the church the children clung to their mothers, and mothers begged for the safety of their little ones. The King’s men knew no pity. They did not attempt to break into the church. They merely set it on fire.
As the flames enveloped it and the thick black smoke filled the air the cries of the innocent could be heard calling curses on their murderers and screaming for mercy.
‘Have done. Have done,’ pleaded Louis but they would not listen to him. In any case it was too late. In that burning church were thirteen hundred innocent people and they were all burned to death.
In his tent Louis lay staring blankly before him. Eleonore lay beside him.
‘I can hear their screaming,’ he said.
She answered: ‘There is no sound now. They are all dead.’
‘All dead!’ he cried. ‘Those innocent people. Holy Mother of God help me! I shall never be able to escape from the sound of their cries.’
‘They should have denounced their lord. They should have sworn allegiance to you.’
‘They were innocent people. What did they know of our quarrel?’
‘You must try to sleep.’
‘To sleep. If I do, I dream. I can smell the smoke. I shall never be free of it. How the wood crackled!’
‘It was old and dry,’ she said.
‘And little children...They called curses on us. Imagine a mother...with her little ones.’
‘It is war,’ said Eleonore. ‘It is not wise to brood on these things.’
But Louis could not stop brooding.
He could not go on, he declared.
‘To give in now would be victory for Theobald,’ Eleonore reminded him.
‘I can’t help it,’ cried Louis. ‘I am sick of war and killing.’
‘You should never have been a king.’
‘You speak truth. My heart is in the Church.’
‘Which is no place for a king’s heart to be.’
‘Sometimes I think I should have refused to take the crown.’
‘How could you, the King’s son, have done that?’
‘Sometimes I think God is not pleased with me. We have been six years married and have no child.’
‘It is a long time to wait,’ agreed Eleonore.
‘Is there something we have done...or not done? Have I displeased God in some way?’ The King shivered. ‘I feel in my heart that whatever we did before the burning of Vitry was nothing compared with that great sin.’
‘Stop thinking of it.’
‘I can’t, I can’t,’ moaned the King.
She knew that he would be useless to command an army in his present state.
‘We should return to Paris,’ she said.
He was eager to agree. ‘Yes,’ he answered. ‘Disband the army. Go back. Cal off the war.’
‘That would be folly. The army will stay here. We shall return. State duties call you to Paris. There you will rest and forget Vitry. You will learn that it is what must be expected in war.’
The war continued. Louis was heartily sick of it but Eleonore would not allow Theobald to have the chance to say the King had been forced to retire from the field.
The King’s ministers begged him to consider what good there was in continuing. Louis would have agreed but he dared not face Eleonore’s wrath.
He could not understand his feeling for her. It was as though he were under a spell. Whatever he might promise to do, when she showed her contempt for his weakness he always gave way to her.
The Abbot of Clairvaux, who had prophesied the death of Louis’s brother Philippe, had become known as a worker of miracles. He had ranged himself against Louis and Eleonore, and came to the court to ask the King to agree to a peace.
Eleonore would not hear of this.
She faced the Abbot and explained to him that to agree to a peace would be to dishonour her own sister, and although this was but one of the causes which had made it necessary for Louis to make war, it was a very important one.
‘Such a war,’ the Abbot told her, ‘is displeasing to God.
Has that not been made clear? God has turned his face from your endeavours. The King suffers deep remorse. He has done so since the burning of Vitry.’
‘And before that,’ said Eleonore bitterly. ‘He has rendered me childless. You, who are said to have the power to make miracles, could perhaps work this one for me if you would.’
The Abbot was thoughtful. ‘Whether you should have the blessing of a child is in the hands of God.’
‘So is all that happens. Yet you have worked miracles, they say. Why do you not work one now?’
‘I could do nothing in this matter.’
‘You mean you will not help me?’
‘If you had a child you would doubtless change your life. Perhaps you need a child.’
‘I need a child,’ said Eleonore. ‘Not only because my son will be the heir to France, but because I long for a child of my own.’
The Abbot nodded.
She caught his arm. ‘You will do this for me?’
‘My lady, I cannot. It is in the hands of God.’
‘If I persuaded the King to stop the war, to call a truce...’
‘If you did that it might be that God would be more ready to listen to your prayers.’
‘I would do anything to get a child.’
‘Then pray with me, but first humble yourself before God. You cannot do that with the sin of war upon you.’
‘If there was peace you would work the miracle?’
‘If there were peace I should be able to ask God to grant your request.’
‘I will speak to the King,’ she said.
She did and the result was that there was peace between Theobald and Louis.
To Eleonore’s great joy she was pregnant. She was sure that Bernard had worked the miracle. All these years and no sign of a child, and now the union would be fruitful.
She had softened a little. She was planning for the child as a humble mother might have done. The songs she sang were of a different nature. The members of the court marveled.
In due course the child was born. A girl.
She was not disappointed. Like all rulers Louis had hoped for a son; yet, she demanded of her ladies, why should there be this overwhelming adoration of the male? ‘I was my father’s heiress although I was a woman,’ she reminded them. ‘Why should the King and I be sad because we have a daughter?’
The Salic law prevailed in France. This meant that no woman could rule. The crown would go to the next male heir. This law was all against Eleonore’s principles and she promised herself that she would not allow it to persist. Her daughter was but a baby yet and there was time enough to think of her future.
She was christened Marie and for more than a year after her birth Eleonore was content to play the devoted mother.
Life had become monotonous. Little Marie was past two years old. Eleonore was devoted to her but naturally the child was often in the company of her nurses. Eleonore continued to hold court. The songs had become more voluptuous again; they stressed the sorrows of unrequited passion and the joys of shared love.
Petronelle was her constant companion; Eleonore watched with smouldering eyes her sister and her husband together. What a passionate affair that had been! Something, sighed Eleonore, which was denied me.
She had at first been fond of Louis. He had been so overcome at the sight of her and was so devoted to her that she had developed quite an affection for him. It was not in her passionate nature to be contented with that. Louis might be her slave and it pleased her that he should be, but his piety bored her, and what was hardest of all to endure was his remorse.