Chapter 109: The Storm on the Horizon - The Leper King - NovelsTime

The Leper King

Chapter 109: The Storm on the Horizon

Author: TheLeperKing
updatedAt: 2025-08-13

CHAPTER 109: CHAPTER 109: THE STORM ON THE HORIZON

July 20th, 1180 — Damascus

The watchtowers of Damascus had not been quiet since the morning.

As the sun rose above the eastern ridgelines, signal horns had sounded along the city’s outer walls. From the minarets of the Great Mosque to the distant farms of Ghouta, the people of Damascus were roused to the call: the Franks had come.

From his post atop the northern gate tower, Emir Jamal al-Din watched the dust cloud roll down from the mountains like a living tide. His breath caught in his throat.

The banners were unmistakable.

The gold cross of Jerusalem. The red lions of England. The black-and-white standard of the Templars. They came like gods of war descending from heaven, glinting with steel, their siege towers trailing behind them on iron-rimmed wheels. Their footmen moved in disciplined lines. Knights rode ahead, not yet close enough for bows, but near enough to be seen. One standard flew higher than the rest—a white banner with a golden sun and a Latin cross burning at its center.

"They’ve come in full," Jamal muttered.

"They will not storm us in a day," said a voice beside him.

Qutb al-Din al-Husayni, commander of the Damascus city garrison, stood in full armor, eyes narrowed. His turban had been replaced with a steel helm. He carried a mace slung at his side and a curved blade on his back. Below them, the inner city was already in motion—smiths hammering spikes into barricades, slaves digging water channels to keep cisterns fresh, and guards distributing bows and bundles of arrows.

"The Franks will wait," Qutb said. "They want a clean siege. They’ll try to starve us first."

"We will not give them time," Jamal replied. "We must prepare now."

Qutb nodded and turned away. "Come. The council awaits. And the Sultan must be updated."

The Citadel of Damascus — An Hour Later

The walls of the great Ayyubid citadel loomed high above the streets of the city, rising like a bastion carved from the mountain itself. Within, the atmosphere was tense. Courtiers paced. Imams whispered in prayer. And guards with drawn scimitars stood at every door.

In a darkened chamber on the second level, Saladin lay on a bed of cedar and silk, his body pale beneath the covers. His face glistened with sweat. The bolt wound under his ribs, though stitched and cleaned, still festered.

The Hospitaller-turned-Muslim physician, Ibn Jameel, who had once treated Saladin years earlier and now served loyally, knelt beside the bed. He held a cloth soaked in a cloudy greenish salve—the mold compound they called ’penicillin’—and pressed it gently to the Sultan’s side.

"His fever broke briefly last night," the doctor murmured to the assembled emirs. "But it returned with the dawn. The wound may be clean, but the heat... it lingers."

"Will he survive?" asked Emir Asim of Hama.

"I cannot say," Ibn Jameel admitted. "I treat him with what I know. But if he does not improve in two days..."

He left the sentence unfinished.

The emirs looked at one another.

Saladin’s brother, al-Adil, clenched his fists.

"Then we hold until he wakes. We hold this city if it costs every man we have. Damascus will not fall while Salah ad-Din breathes."

"But what if he does not?" muttered the Emir of Baalbek, bruised and exhausted from fleeing his own city days before.

"We do not speak of that," al-Adil snapped.

Qutb al-Din entered then, dust still on his boots from the walls.

"The Franks are encamping along the eastern slopes. They fly at least thirty thousand strong, perhaps more with Richard’s host arrived. They are building trenches and platforms already. Earthworks have begun."

"Where are our men?" asked al-Adil.

"Only twelve thousand within the city," Qutb said. "The rest have deserted or been scattered after Homs.

A dark silence fell over the chamber.

"Then we use what we have," al-Adil finally said. "The city is well-stocked. The walls strong. We hold the Barada canals and the river. We let the Franks come to us and die on these stones."

"And if they divert the canals?" asked Ibn Jameel. "If they dry the orchards and foul the cisterns?"

"Then we pray," al-Adil said grimly. "And kill as many as we can before we starve."

Later That Evening — Damascus, Eastern Ramparts

Torchlight flickered from the towers as night fell. Crews worked in fevered rhythm—stacking stones, reinforcing the wooden gates with iron bands, and preparing tar cauldrons for boiling pitch.

Archers strung their bows. Volunteers from the city—merchants, farmers, even boys—were handed spears and taught to watch for scaling ladders.

From atop the east wall, a young Saracen soldier named Tariq could see the Frankish campfires glowing in the darkness like a necklace of stars. The sound of hammers never ceased. Siege towers were being assembled on flatbeds, and massive engines like monsters with long arms waited to be pulled forward by oxen.

"What if they storm tomorrow?" his companion asked, voice trembling.

"They won’t," Tariq said. "They want us hungry before they come."

He reached into his satchel and pulled out a date. "Here," he said, handing it to the boy. "Eat. Save your strength. We may have months ahead."

From behind them, the great bronze doors of the gate rumbled as they closed for the night.

The siege had begun.

And Damascus, ancient and defiant, prepared to weather the wrath of the cross.

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