........ it will lose its freedom, and the .........

If a nation values anything more than freedom, it will lose its freedom, and the irony of it is that if it is comfort or money that it values more, it will lose that too.




Most Ironic Deaths In History

Death is a normal part of life. While most people die with predictable reasons, some people die rather ironic deaths. The world has seen numerous deaths in which the universe seemed to have conspired with fates to make an ironic statement. Some of these deaths include historical figures, royalties, celebrities and inventors. Remembering these various accounts of ironic deaths never fail to bring an eerie kind of sense.

Hans Steininger


Hans Steininger is known in the history books as the man with the longest beard (4.5 feet). Artists have fondly sketched his glorious expression of facial hair and even immortalized his crowning achievement in stone. However, his hairy asset is what brought him to sudden death. As he was caught in a fire, he accidentally tripped over his long beard, broke his neck and died.

Marcus Licinius Crassus


Marcus Licinius Crassus was a well known general. He was also a very wealthy man- wealthy enough to fund armies and invasions. However, his defeat with the Parthians ended his glory. The Parthians punished him for his greed by pouring molten gold down his throat.

Bobby Leach


In more recent centuries, Bobby Leach was a world-renowned daredevil. He was known to history as the first person to successfully navigate the Niagara Falls (1911). In his lifetime, Leach survived broken knee caps and jaw. A fateful tripping accident caused by a banana peel fractured his leg. He eventually died of gangrene.

Franz Reichelt


Franz Reichelt, an Austrian tailor famous for his overcoat and parachute hybrid, tested his invention by jumping from the first deck of the Eiffel Towel. In front of spectators and media crews, the world witnessed his death as he fell straight down.

Otto Lilienthal


Another glider by the name of Otto Lilienthal, one of the pioneers in human aviation, died in his last aerial glide in August 9, 1896 as he fell 17 meters and broke his spine.

Thomas Midgley Jr


The American chemist Thomas Midgley Jr. was the inventor of leaded petrol and CFC. Needless to say, his inventions caused millions of deaths in human history as well as severe impacts to the environment. Later on in his life, he contracted lead poisoning and polio, causing him to be disabled and tied to his bed. He then created an elaborate system of ropes and pulleys that allow him to move and adjust his body in his bed. At the age of 55, he was accidentally strangled by his ropes and pulleys.

Marie Curie


Another scientist by the name of Marie Curie, a 1903 Nobel Prize winner for her theory of radioactivity and isolation of isotopes, contracted aplastic anemia due to her prolonged exposure to radiation. The disease eventually killed her.

Jerome Rodale


Jerome Rodale is known as the founder of the organic food revolution. As a naturalist, he promoted clean living. He was a huge advocate of the life-extending benefits of organic lifestyle. At the age of 72, he died of a heart attack after claiming in an interview that he is fit enough to reach his 100th birthday.

Clement Vallandigham


Clement Vallandigham was a lawyer known for his dedication in defending his clients. In 1871, while he was demonstrating during a court case, he accidentally shot himself dead.

Myra Davis


The Psycho double, Myra Davis, died similar death to the character she portrayed in the mega-hit movie. In 1988, she was raped and killed by a “psycho”, re-enacting the famous shower scene that she did in this Alfred Hitchcock classic.

George Story


George Story was featured in the cover page of Life Magazine’s “Life Baby” issue. As a newborn baby, his picture was used in the headline “Life Begins”. The magazine published details of Story’s life, from infancy to old age. A week after the magazine announced the release of its last issue, Story died of heart failure. Hence, the last issue of Life Magazine took the headline “Life Ends”.

Jim Fixx


Jim Fixx, was the writer of the 1977 bestseller “The Complete Book of Running”. He was an advocate of the longevity effects of running and even made a fortune out of his fitness campaigns. One day, Fixx had a fatal heart attack while he was running.

Steve Irwin


Lastly, who would even forget the recent death of Steve Irwin, the eccentric and beloved Australian naturalist that hosted a number of wildly popular TV shows? In his career, he had traveled the globe to unravel an adventure in exploring the animal kingdom. In 2006, while swimming above an adult sting ray, the 8-inch barb of the ray’s tail hit Irwin’s heart, which led to his death.

Merlin’s Immortals


Martyr’s
Fire
Books by Sigmund Brouwer
Merlin’s Immortals
The Orphan King
Fortress of Mist
Fiction
Broken Angel
The Canary List
Flight of Shadows
Evening Star
Silver Moon
Sun Dance
Thunder Voice
Double Helix
Blood Ties
The Weeping Chamber
Pony Express Christmas
The Leper
Out of the Shadows
Crown of Thorns
Lies of Saints
The Last Disciple
The Last Sacrifice
The Last Temple
Fuse of Armageddon
Devil’s Pass
Dead Man’s Switch

Martyr’s Fire
Published by WaterBrook Press
12265 Oracle Boulevard, Suite 200
Colorado Springs, Colorado 80921
The characters and events in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to actual persons or
events is coincidental.
Trade Paperback ISBN: 978-1-4000-7156-2
eBook ISBN: 978-0-307-73209-5
Copyright © 2013 by Sigmund Brouwer
Cover design by Mark Ford
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or
by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any
information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Published in the United States by WaterBrook Multnomah, an imprint of the Crown
Publishing Group, a division of Random House Inc., New York.
WaterBrook and its deer colophon are registered trademarks of Random House Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
[to come]
Printed in the United States of America
2013—First Edition
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Spring, Northern England—AD 1313

One
The man that Isabelle faced was wealthy. And handsome, except for
the stub where his left ear had been, now half-covered by hair. She
could tell by the shift of his shoulders and the intensity of his gaze that he
was enthralled by her, as indeed were nearly all men. Yet he was not
Thomas. She spent hours dreaming that one day, Thomas, too, would be
enthralled.
The man before her now had been on his horse, crossing a pasture that
overlooked the town of York, clustered behind the high stone walls that
protected it. With occasional clouds throwing brief shadows as they crossed
overhead, she’d waited in sunshine, knowing that this was along his regular
path to York from hunting in the moors. She’d been sitting on a blanket like
a woman of leisure, dressed in fine silks, a basket beside her.
He was tall and slim, wearing the clothes of a nobleman. He’d dismounted
and looked around, as if wondering where her servants might be.
She had risen from the blanket and now lifted the basket with food.
“If you’ve been riding long,” she purred, “you must be hungry. And I’ve
been waiting for you.”
She set the basket on the ground and leaned down to lift out a piece of
thick buttered bread and pieces of rich cheese.
As she expected, he took it without hesitation. “You know who I am,
then?”
“Of course,” she answered.
He smiled with pride.
He was Michael of York, the son of the earl who had enlisted Thomas’s
10 Sigmund B rouwer
army to prevail against the Scots not so long ago. As he tore off a chunk of
bread and stuffed it into his mouth, he looked around again. Not with the
eye of a man wary of a trap, but with the sharp glance of a predator. She was
in front of him and so alone. And he was a rich and powerful man, accustomed
to being offered what he wanted—or to taking it whether it was offered
or not. Obvious on her neck was jewelry that was worth a year’s wages
for a working man. If he had the heart of a thief, and she knew he did, his
mind would have been on her apparent helplessness.
Since no noblewoman should be alone in a field because the dangers
were too great, the apparent helplessness should have made him suspicious.
But men were fools.
“Mead?” she asked, holding up a chalice.
He took it without a word, as if he were entitled to it. He rammed some
cheese into his mouth first, then washed it down with the honey wine.
“You’ve been waiting for me,” Michael said, with a grin that came too
close to a leer.
“With a message from those who watched you cut off your own ear.”
His smile froze, just for an instant. Then he laughed.
“From anyone but a lady as lovely as yourself, I would take that accusation
as an insult. And I would answer it accordingly.”
“It is a dangerous accusation,” she agreed. “If your father ever had proof
that you severed your own ear to force him to attack Magnus, you would be
thrown in prison and disinherited.”
“You are very alone here.” He gestured at the open pasture. “You would
be wise not to anger me.”
He placed his right hand on the hilt of his knife, hanging from a sheath
on a gold-studded belt.
“And you would be wise to listen to me,” she said. “After all, your father
already questions your loyalty, does he not? After the trial by ordeal, did he
Mar t y r’s F i re 11
not leave Magnus believing that Thomas is an ally and that you had deceived
him?”
Michael’s face pinched. He was beginning to suspect a trap. But his
next words suggested that he believed the trap came from the earl.
“I will speak to you as I have repeatedly spoken to my father: I do not
know the men who attacked me and cut off my ear. All I know is that I was
given a message to deliver and told it was from Thomas. Obviously, those
who cut off my ear were the ones deceitful about Thomas. Not me. Go back
to my father and tell him this.”
“Your father did not send me,” she said. She tossed him a heavy ring.
“Look closely at the symbol. Those of the symbol are the ones who sent me.”
He caught it in his left hand and studied it. He glanced at her and
closed his fist around the ring. He kept his right hand on the handle of his
knife.
“I don’t believe you.” His words were certain enough, but not the tone.
“Let me repeat what you were told by those of the symbol. You were
promised that if you delivered a letter to your father, along with your ear,
pretending it was a letter from Thomas, that your father would go to war
and take the castle of Magnus. And that Magnus would be yours.”
Isabelle knew this was truth. She’d been hidden behind trees, watching
the discussion, seeing greed cross this man’s face as he calculated what small
price it would cost for him to obtain a kingdom—his deception and his ear.
“Lies,” he said, smiling.
“The man who made you that promise,” she said, “was my father. Richard
Mewburn, who ruled Magnus until Thomas took it from him.”
She watched his smile fade as he thought through the implications.
This was not something that a person could guess—proof to him that she
knew for certain. And if she knew of that secret conversation, then she likely
knew much more.
12 Sigmund B rouwer
Michael lifted his hand away from his knife. “Please tell Lord Mewburn
that I had no intention of harming you.”
“Of course not,” she said. “We are just having a conversation. So tell
me. If my father were to deliver York to you, would you, in return, help him
secure Magnus?”
“York cannot be mine while my father is the earl,” he answered. It was
an oblique answer. Nothing in it openly suggested disloyalty. Yet it was an
invitation to continue.
“A man who is willing to cut off his own ear is a man hungry for
power,” Isabelle said. “This time, however, what we ask of you will be far
less painful.”
Michael’s face reflected obvious relief before once again contorting into
dismay. “But I was already promised that Magnus would fall. It did not.
The trial by ordeal that Thomas faced and survived—”
“Nothing will be asked of you until Magnus falls,” Isabelle said. “But
believe me, it will. Very soon.”
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