The Leper King
Chapter 91: After the Storm
CHAPTER 91 - 91: AFTER THE STORM
May 24th, 1180 - outside Aleppo
The sun dipped toward the western horizon, casting long shadows across a field soaked in blood. Smoke still hung low over the earth—the remains of torched siege wagons, shattered arrows, and burning banners drifting skyward like lost prayers.
Baldwin IV stood on a rise just east of the battlefield, atop a ridge muddied by the trampling of hooves and men. His horse, foam-flecked and weary, stamped restlessly beneath him, nostrils flaring at the stench of blood and burnt flesh. The king's silver-inlaid helm was tucked beneath one arm. His face, gaunt and pallid, was streaked with sweat, grime, and blood—not his own.
The wind stirred his purple cloak. His eyes—ice pale, clear despite the fever eating at his flesh—scanned the field.
It was over.
Below, the plain was littered with the detritus of war. Thousands of corpses lay strewn across the slope and valley, twisted in death: Crusader and Saracen alike. Muslim horsemen in green and black lay beside Christian knights clad in steel and white. Splintered lances jutted from the ground like skeletal trees. The banners of Jerusalem still stood—tattered, but standing—along the ridges of the right and center.
They had held. And then they had crushed.
But the cost...
A shout broke his thoughts. Marshal Raymond of Jaffa rode up beside him, his helmet off, face bloodied and his left eye swollen shut. He was breathing hard.
"The field is ours," he said. "They're running. Those who can. The rest—"
He gestured toward the carnage.
"They're dead."
Baldwin nodded slowly.
"And our dead?" he asked, voice hoarse from dust and shouting commands all day.
Raymond hesitated.
"Over a thousand, Sire. Maybe more. Hard to count with the wounded still being gathered. Two thousand more hurt badly enough to be off the line for weeks."
Baldwin closed his eyes for a moment.
"And the enemy?"
"Some say ten thousand lie on the field. Others—more. It's a butcher's field out there."
The king opened his eyes again and let the silence stretch, listening to the low groans of the dying carried on the breeze. Somewhere, a knight sobbed. A horse, pierced through the flank by a javelin, was being put down by its rider with a mercy stroke.
It was the price of the snare.
Raymond cleared his throat, voice subdued now.
"My lord... there is more."
Baldwin turned.
Raymond's mouth tightened. "Bohemond of Antioch is dead."
The words hit like a hammer.
Baldwin's lips parted slightly, but no sound came.
"He fell during the final charge," Raymond said. "His cavalry smashed into Saladin's right like thunder, just as planned. They broke the flank cleanly—but Bohemond took a spear through the gut. He was thrown from the saddle, trampled. They only just found his body. Crushed."
Baldwin looked away, jaw clenched.
He had known the cost. He had asked the man to delay—to hold until the moment when Saladin's flank was fully committed. And Bohemond had obeyed, even knowing what that might mean.
He had waited. He had charged. And he had died.
The king raised a trembling hand and crossed himself slowly.
"Christ have mercy on him," Baldwin said. "He died as a prince should—with honor, and in service to all of us."
Raymond bowed his head.
"He was bold. Wild at times. But today... today he was a lion."
A burst of flame crackled below as a broken Muslim supply cart finally caught fire. The orange light cast flickering shadows across the battlefield. Baldwin's gaze swept toward the distant northwest—the road back to Damascus.
"Have the enemy fully withdrawn?" he asked.
"We've pushed them clear of the plain. Most fled northeast and east, but some are retreating west to the road. We've no strength left to pursue. We hold the field, but not enough to chase them into the hills."
Baldwin didn't argue. Pursuit could come later. This ground—the site of their trap, the place where Saladin had bled—was what mattered now.
He turned as another rider galloped up. This one bore a Frankish cross on his surcoat and wore the battered colors of the Ibelin household. His horse was lathered and stumbling, and the man himself was pale beneath his helm.
He dismounted hastily, then knelt.
"Sire," he gasped. "Word from the field... they say Saladin has been wounded."
Baldwin's head snapped up.
"How badly?"
The man swallowed. "They say he was struck near the end of the fighting. A bolt from a crossbow caught him below the ribs. His guard carried him off the field. Some say he collapsed soon after. No one knows if he still lives."
Baldwin said nothing for a long moment.
If Saladin was dead...
The very balance of the Muslim world could collapse.
But if he lived—if he recovered—it would not be the end. It would only delay the storm.
"Have your men confirm it," Baldwin said at last. "I want hard proof before we declare anything."
The messenger bowed. "Yes, Sire."
He turned and rode off, disappearing into the dust rising from the broken field.
Raymond shifted uneasily beside him.
"If he's dead... we must move fast," he said. "Strike while his forces are in confusion."
"If," Baldwin echoed.
A gust of wind tugged at his cloak again, carrying the scent of blood and victory. He looked out once more over the valley where so many had fallen. The sun had dipped below the hills now, painting the clouds in crimson.
"Begin burial details at first light," Baldwin said. "The Franks will have their rest. The Muslims... as many as we can. Let the priests walk the field tonight."
"Yes, my lord."
Baldwin turned his horse slowly, guiding it back toward the battered heart of the camp, now littered with tents hastily re-erected and fires rekindled by the exhausted. The wounded moaned under makeshift awnings. Soldiers slumped around fires, drinking in silence. Some wept for brothers lost. Others stared blankly, too stunned to grieve.
As he passed, they looked up—and many saluted.
Some knelt.
They had won.
They had shattered the Sultan's army and lived to see another dawn.
But in Baldwin's heart, it did not feel like triumph. It felt like a reprieve. A narrow, bleeding reprieve carved out by courage, death, and iron.
And Bohemond's body.
A priest waited at the edge of the camp, holding a small silver cross and murmuring Latin prayers over a row of fallen knights.
Baldwin dismounted and knelt beside him. He bowed his head and murmured the Pater Noster under his breath.
Then he rose, pain flaring through his legs and arms. His bandages were soaked with sweat beneath his armor. He swayed slightly.
"My king," said Hugh of Ibelin, stepping forward. "You need rest."
"I will rest," Baldwin said, "when we have buried our dead... and know whether Saladin lives."
He turned back once more, staring across the plain.
The Cross still stood.
And the future of the Holy Land trembled, waiting.