After the last volley, the air forgot how to breathe.
Powder reek hung low over the plain, a taste like iron filings and burnt cloves. The ground was studded with torn leather, cracked shields, and the stiffening weight of men and horses tangled together like fallen scaffolding. Crows came in a patient black drift. The banners moved as if for the first time without fear.
Constantine walked. The noise had gone out of the world; even the cheers seemed to arrive from far away, like surf through stone. His boots sank where grapeshot had harrowed the soil. A janissary's cap, white now charcoal, lay in a hoofprint. Flies stitched a bright seam along a spear haft. He drew breath and felt it all the way to his ribs: not dread, not guilt. Lift. The kind of buoyancy that comes not from miracle, but from work well set and done: measure, drill, patience, tactics chosen, lines held, jaws sprung.
A wounded horse, reins snapped, picked its way past him, ribs heaving, eyes filmed gray with shock. A boy with a cut lip and a Burgundian cross on his torn surcoat reached for the halter and failed; the animal shied, stood trembling, and at last folded to its knees as if remembering prayer. Two men lowered their pikes and laid them across the carcass to mark a path for the stretcher-bearers. Somewhere a kettle spilled; somewhere a man prayed in a tongue Constantine did not know, the words broken, the intention clear.
George kept pace a half‑step back, a ledger-keeper's eyes taking stock of a kingdom of wreckage. Andreas limped on the other side, one greave splashed brown to the knee, his hand loosely bandaged where a splinter had kissed the knuckle. Behind them officers shadowed in a loose wake, faces scorched and raw with wind and smoke. Across the field, the mixed host of crusaders and Romans was turning its roar into rhythm: water brought, wounded lifted, cords of powder gathered from the least-damaged barrels. Musketeers stacked their firelocks in tripods; a sergeant walked the line with a chalked tally on a broken shield, naming what was left: wicks, shot, rammers, sponges.
A Serbian gave his waterskin to a dying man who could not hold it; he tipped the leather for him, and what dribbled down the man's beard made mud on his chest. A crossbowman snapped a bent quarrel in two and tucked the better half into his boot. A captain stood very still with both hands on the crown of his helmet, as if keeping his skull from lifting off.
The chant rose faint at first, shivered once, then took. "Ieros Skopos!" "Ieros Skopos!" Then the shape of a single name threading through it, "Constantine!", until the slope itself seemed to answer back. The words didn't feel like flattery. They felt like breath returned to something that had been drowning for ages.
George cleared his throat. "Nearly all the powder spent," he said, quietly. "If they had stood one more hour..."
"We've spent men, gold and gunpowder," Constantine cut him off, not sharply, but with a small, unarguable finality. "We've minted history."
A wind, thin as a knife, came off the low hills and turned the smoke in pale veils. They climbed a rise where it tugged at his cloak and laid the whole field open, the snapped corridor where the sipahis had been taken apart, the shallow notch where the guns had worked until the barrels throbbed red, the far ridge where Turahan had spent his fury and found only pikes and crossbow strings and a wall of men who didn't break. In the shallow, the turf was black as bread crust; strips of wet linen lay there, dropped when they had come hot from the swabs and could not be wrung fast enough.
Constantine raised a single hand.
For a heartbeat the plain held its breath again. Then it erupted. Helmets thrust skyward, pikeheads shivered in sun, a rattle of shields like rain on slate. He let it crest once, and when it began to fall he spoke, not with an orator's gilding, but with the tools he trusted: clean lines; firm stakes.
"Men," he said. "Look."
He didn't gesture to the bodies. He drew their eyes to the order still stamped in the earth, the intervals between the squares, the clear fields of fire, the pikes that made walls where there were none. "This is how we win: with fire and patience. With the tagmata holding their nerve. With ranks that load, step, and fire as one. You kept your count. You kept your shape. And when the horns called, you let the guns speak."
He pointed, not to glory, but to the quiet math of victory: the measured gaps where the files had stepped forward, fired, and fallen back to reload. "You did not run to noise," he said. "You held to the rhythm you made, and theirs broke against it."
He lifted his hand once, steady. "Hold to that, and no man can make a god out of fear and throw it at you."
A murmur like assent rolled the front ranks. Somewhere behind, a chaplain made the sign of the cross and then put his palm on a boy's back until his shaking stopped.
"Some of you have lost brothers," he said, voice lower. "We will name them. We will bury them. And we will walk farther than they thought any of us could. Not drunk with victory, useful to no one, but steady with it. You did this. Keep your edges sharp. Eat. Drink. Carry the wounded. We move again when the sun says so."
He turned to Andreas. The general's face was ash-white where it wasn't red. "The question is no longer if we win," Constantine said. "It's how far we take this."
Andreas nodded once, as men do when the body is tired of talking. "Then we'll set the count again before dark," he said. "Powder, shot, good feet still under men."
The horsetail standards came on a cart dragged by two plow horses. The poles rattled with each rut, tassels clotted dark. The men who pulled it would not meet his eye. A broken stirrup hung from one side and ticked against the axle like a loose tooth. At the back, wrapped in a torn carpet and tied at the ankles with a bowstring, lay what had been Sultan Murad.
News had raced through the ranks in mad, contradictory bursts, the Sultan escaped, the Sultan fell, the Sultan cut his way to the river, the Sultan was taken, until the sight of that carpet exhaled something from the whole army at once. One of the Burgundians crossed himself three times and then kissed a dent in his helmet.
Andreas touched the binding with a knuckle. "They'll call him a martyr," he said. "Better to bury him here and say little."
George shook his head. "Let word go out that we returned the body whole. Let Edirne choose whether its next war is for a throne or for revenge."
Constantine watched the crows turn above them, a black idle wheel. What does winning mean? Alexander had dragged Darius's cart from the field and sent it east; Ancient Rome had paraded kings in chains until mercy, or the axe, made history clean. His gaze went to the carpet's edge where dust had clotted in a fringe; to the boot-sole print dark on the cloth where one of the men had braced it straight. He thought of the boy sent east ahead of the rout, small and stiff in the saddle, ringed by helms that flared like metal flowers under the sun. He thought, briefly and without bitterness, that dynasties are harder to kill than men.
"We return him," Constantine said. "Washed. Wrapped. With his seal, if we can pry it from the wreckage of his ring. A flag of truce to their nearest commander."
Andreas's brow furrowed. "Mercy to an enemy who will not return it?"
"Mercy to our purpose," Constantine answered. "We are not here to teach the sons of Osman to hate better."
They had no basin fit for a king. A pot was brought, scoured with sand until the inside shone like a dull moon; a square of linen, unbloodied by luck more than by care; a skin of water that tasted of goats and hose. A prisoner in a ragged coat said he knew the words. He did not ask for payment; he asked for space. They gave it. Two officers set their shoulders under the carpet and turned it from the mud. A third took a knife to the bowstring and frowned when the knot held; he worried at it until it gave, and then pressed his lips together, not to keep from gagging, but to keep his face proper.
"Find the seal," George said to a lad with quick hands. The boy nodded, swallowed, and went to it, fingers careful as a pickpocket's. When he brought the ring, bent into a crescent, Constantine weighed it on his palm.
"Wrap him," Constantine said. "Let it be known we mocked no man's dead."
A murmur went out. It was not approval. It was not dissent. It was that quiet sound soldiers make when something decent is done in the open, and they need to mark it with a throat-clearing so it will not feel like softness.
The Council
They met under a patched awning hammered to two wagon beds and a thorn tree, the shade mottled and untrustworthy. The table was a shield turned flat, its boss dented. A map, more memory than ink, was weighed at the corners with a knife, a stone, a shot pouch, and a cup. Wine came in a clay jug that sweated mud. Men arrived with their victories still on them, blood freckles on cheeks, the light of a reprieve in eyes gone to ash and back again. The air inside the shade smelled of leather and sweat and the green sap the thorn gave off when someone leaned on it too hard.
Hunyadi entered last, hair damp, his hauberk unbuckled at the throat as if the air had become a thing he could swallow again without paying for it. He took Constantine's forearm in the soldier's grip and held it a heartbeat too long.
"I had heard stories about your new weapons," he said simply, not as a preface but as tribute. "Stories are farmers' talk. This…" he gestured to the field "is a monastery. Men will learn war like letters now. There will be rules where there were drums."
Jean de Croÿ laughed for the first time in a while, a bark with wine in it. "By Saint Michael, the Duke will have to endure me for a fortnight," he said. "Every tent will get the tale, twice." He sobered a fraction and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. "And every tent will ask if we go on."
Thomas, sweat-streaked, eyes still bright with the day's adrenaline, didn't wait. "We break them on the road to Edirne," he said. "Now. While they don't yet know where their head is. We can be at Edirne before their councils have stopped shouting."
"Or we strike Thessaloniki while they grieve," Hunyadi countered. "Put a wall to a decision while its letters are still being written."
Branković stood with arms folded, the carved weather of a dozen narrow roads in his face. "Thessaloniki," he said. "Stones are stubborn, but men behind stones need to eat."
George set his folio down like a stone. "Powder," he said. "Food. The men think they're gods this hour. Tomorrow they will be men again, and men eat. We have shot enough for a skirmish and a prayer." He flipped a page with a finger blackened to the nail. "Linens, oil, salve. Cart axles, three cracked. If we run to Edirne, we arrive on bleeding feet and windy barrels."
Thomas scowled. "If we slow, we give them time to lie to themselves."
"We aren't slowing," Andreas said. "We are choosing a throat we can hold." He tapped the map where the sea penned Thessaloniki on one side and the hills frowned at it from the other.
Jean drummed the boss of the shield with his knuckles. "What do you want the Duke of Burgundy to hear from me, Sire? That we chased a rumor to Edirne and starved, or that we asked a city to listen and it did?"
Constantine let the noise of them run and wear itself two fingers thin. He looked not at the map, but at the men: a Hungaro‑Wallach captain whose life had narrowed to a point and widened again; a Burgundian whose faith lay in old steel and new stories; a Serbian lord with shepherd paths braided into his skull; a brother who hurt when not moving; an advisor whose arithmetic had broken more armies than pikes could.
He thought of the waterfall at Edessa, the white ribbon that did not care who ruled the ridge above it, that fell and fell and did its work without listening to oaths.
He remembered the way the tagmata had moved, not as a miracle, but as a body remembering its bones. He remembered the breath before the first volley, when men looked at him to see whether they should be afraid. He remembered, too, that fear does not vanish, only trades masters.
"We march on Thessaloniki," he said. "Not to batter the stones, yet. To speak to the men behind them."
Thomas made a sound like a bit chafing. "Words?"
"Words that ride with cannon behind them," Constantine replied. "We field, we entrench, we set our guns where they can be seen and not fired, and we send into the city a message that carries two truths: their Sultan is dead; their relief is a boy on the run. Let them open the gates rather than learn how long despair lasts."
He let the weight of the plan settle, then added, his tone harder, "Let the Ottomans fight each other in Edirne. We will not march there and bind them in unity. We go to Thessaloniki, and from there, we will judge the ground anew."