The dawn broke over the valley of Montgisard, painting the rocky slopes in hues of gold and shadow. Ethan, as Baldwin IV, sat astride his destrier at the head of the Crusader army, his silver mask a beacon for his men. The air was thick with tension, the distant rumble of Saladin's drums echoing like a heartbeat of war. His leprosy-wracked body ached beneath the chainmail, but the neem-turmeric paste and frankincense oil had kept his lesions stable, and the willow bark tea dulled the fever enough to keep him sharp. Baldwin's memories burned in his mind, mapping the valley's narrow defile, the slopes where the Templars lay hidden, and the plain where the battle would turn. Ethan's own addition—archers on the western ridge—waited in ambush, a modern twist to tip the scales.
The Crusader force was small: five hundred knights, two thousand foot soldiers, and the elite contingents of eighty Templar and sixty Hospitaller knights. Saladin's army, sprawling across the valley below, numbered twelve thousand—cavalry, archers, and infantry, their banners fluttering under the Ayyubid crescent. The odds were crushing, but Baldwin's victory at Montgisard was etched in history, and Ethan clung to that knowledge, even as doubt gnawed at him. He was no warrior, yet he had to lead.
Balian of Ibelin rode up, his face grim but resolute. "Sire, Saladin's vanguard is entering the valley. The Templars are in position, and the archers are concealed. Your orders?"
Ethan's heart pounded, but Baldwin's instincts steadied him. "Hold until their main force is in the defile," he said, his voice carrying over the rustle of armor. "Then signal the Templars to charge the flanks. The archers will loose when the enemy's rear is exposed. Raymond holds the left, you the center. I'll lead the reserve."
Balian nodded, relaying the commands. Ethan glanced at Raymond of Tripoli, commanding the left flank, his expression unreadable. Joscelin de Courtenay, in the center with Balian, avoided his gaze, his loyalty to Sibylla a lingering threat. Odo de St. Amand, the Templar Grand Master, waited with his knights, his zeal barely contained. Ethan had warned him against rash charges, but the man's fervor was a wildfire. The Hospitallers, under Roger de Moulins, were disciplined but distant, their allegiance split. The political fractures in the army were as dangerous as Saladin's numbers, and Ethan knew a single misstep could unravel everything.
The drums grew louder, and the valley trembled with the march of Saladin's army. Ethan watched from a low rise, his squires holding the royal banner aloft. The Ayyubid vanguard—light cavalry and infantry—poured into the defile, their formation tight but overconfident, unaware of the trap. Ethan's breath caught as the main body followed, heavy cavalry and archers, their armor glinting. He raised a hand, signaling the scouts to watch for the rear guard.
"Now," he whispered to himself, Baldwin's memories aligning with his own instincts. The defile was choked, Saladin's forces strung out and vulnerable. He nodded to a herald, who blew a sharp note on a horn.
The Templars erupted from the eastern slopes, a thunder of hooves and steel. Eighty knights, led by Odo, slammed into the Ayyubid flank, their lances splintering shields and scattering infantry. Screams and the clash of metal filled the air as the Templars carved through the enemy, their white surcoats stained with dust and blood. Ethan's heart raced—this was the moment Baldwin had planned, the hammer strike to disrupt Saladin's lines.
On the western ridge, Ethan's archers loosed their first volley, a modern addition inspired by strategy games. Arrows rained down on the Ayyubid rear, sowing chaos among the supply train and reserve cavalry. Horses reared, men fell, and the enemy's cohesion faltered. Ethan's gamble was paying off, but the battle was far from won.
Saladin's commanders rallied, their heavy cavalry forming a line to counter the Templars. Ethan watched, his grip tightening on the reins. Odo was pushing too far, his knights overextending into the enemy's center. "Damn it," Ethan muttered, then caught himself—Baldwin's decorum was second nature now. He signaled Balian. "Reinforce the Templars! Keep them from breaking ranks!"
Balian spurred his horse, leading a contingent of knights to shore up the Templar advance. The center, under Balian and Joscelin, held firm, their spears repelling an Ayyubid countercharge. Raymond's left flank engaged, but Ethan noticed his maneuvers were sluggish, as if testing the king's authority rather than committing fully. The regent's ambition was a shadow on the battlefield, and Ethan marked it for later.
The battle raged for hours, the valley a maelstrom of dust, blood, and steel. Ethan led the reserve, a small force of knights, into the fray when Saladin's cavalry threatened to outflank the center. His sword felt foreign in his hand, but Baldwin's muscle memory guided his strikes, parrying a scimitar and felling an Ayyubid rider. Pain lanced through his arms, his leprosy protesting every swing, but adrenaline and willow bark kept him moving. He shouted orders, rallying his men, his masked face a symbol of defiance.
The turning point came when the archers' relentless volleys broke the Ayyubid rear. Saladin's supply train scattered, and his reserves faltered, unable to reinforce the front. The Templars, bolstered by Balian's knights, smashed through the enemy's weakened flank, and the Crusader center surged forward, driving a wedge through Saladin's lines. Ethan saw the Ayyubid banners waver, then fall, as panic spread. Saladin's army broke, fleeing the valley in disarray, pursued by Templar and Hospitaller cavalry.
By midday, the valley was quiet, strewn with bodies and broken weapons. Ethan dismounted, his legs trembling as he surveyed the carnage. The Crusaders had lost perhaps five hundred men, a heavy toll, but Saladin's losses were catastrophic—thousands dead or captured, their camp abandoned. The royal banner stood tall, and cheers rose from the survivors, chanting "Jerusalem!" and "Baldwin!"
Ethan's chest swelled with relief, but Baldwin's memories tempered his triumph. Montgisard was a victory, but Saladin would return. The political vipers in his own camp were another matter. As the army regrouped, Ethan summoned his commanders to a makeshift council on the battlefield.
Balian approached first, bloodied but unbowed. "A miracle, sire," he said, his voice hoarse. "You've turned the tide. The men call you God's champion."
Ethan nodded, his mask hiding his exhaustion. "The men fought bravely. But we're not done. Secure the valley, gather the wounded, and collect Saladin's abandoned supplies."
Raymond and Joscelin joined them, their expressions a study in contrasts. Raymond's was guarded, his ambition checked by the victory but not extinguished. Joscelin's was sour, his earlier doubts proven wrong. Odo de St. Amand, his surcoat torn, bowed deeply, his zeal tempered by the king's success. "God's will is done, sire," he said, though Ethan sensed a grudging respect.
"You all fought well," Ethan said, his voice carrying Baldwin's authority. "But let this victory bind us. Jerusalem stands only if we stand together." He fixed Raymond with a pointed look. "Regent, your flank held, but I expected swifter action. We'll discuss this in Jerusalem."
Raymond's jaw tightened, but he bowed. "As you will, my lord."
Joscelin shifted uncomfortably. "The barons will rejoice, sire. Your leadership silenced all doubt."
Ethan doubted that, but he let it pass. The victory had strengthened his position, but the court's scheming would resume. Sibylla's absence from the battle was telling—her influence lingered through Joscelin, and Ethan would need to confront her soon.
As the army prepared to return to Jerusalem, Ethan inspected the captured Ayyubid supplies—tents, weapons, even a few medical texts in Arabic. His modern mind seized on the texts; they might hold clues to refine his leprosy treatments. He ordered them sent to Brother Gerard, along with a message to continue the neem and frankincense regimen.
Back in Jerusalem, the city erupted in celebration as the army marched through the gates, bells ringing from the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Ethan, carried in a litter to spare his body, waved to the crowds, his mask a symbol of triumph. But in his chambers that night, exhaustion crashed over him. The battle had tested his limits, and his lesions, though stable, throbbed from the strain. He sipped willow bark tea, staring at a parchment sketch of the counterweight trebuchet. The victory at Montgisard had bought him time—time to push his irrigation channels, waterwheels, and siege weapons, time to fight his disease, time to outmaneuver the court.
Yet as he closed his eyes, Baldwin's memories whispered of Saladin's resilience, and Ethan's own fears echoed: could he keep this up, a modern soul in a dying king's body, leading a kingdom on the edge of collapse?