During this return of the King there came to meet him Christovao de Figueiredo,[560]who was at that time in the city of Bisnaga with horses,and he took with him twenty Portuguese musqueteers,he also himself having his musquet.The King took much pleasure in his company,glad that he should see the war and his great power;and he ordered some tents to be given to him of those taken from the Ydallcao,and commanded that he should be lodged close to his own quarters.One day Christovao de Figueiredo told the King that he wanted to go and see the city,but the King said that he should not set his heart upon that because he did not want any disaster to befall him.But Christovao de Figueiredo replied that the whole business of the Portuguese was war,and that this would be the greatest favour that he could do him,namely that His Highness should permit him to go and see the Moors.So the King gave him leave and sent some people with him.Christovao de Figueiredo went close to the trench before the walls,keeping himself as much concealed as possible,and seeing how fearlessly the Moors exposed themselves on the wall,began,with the musqueteers whom he had brought,to open fire on them in such a way that he slew many,the Moors being careless and free from fear,as men who up to then had never seen men killed with firearms nor with other such weapons.So they began to forsake the wall (at this point),and the king's troops found an opportunity of coming in safety to it,and they began to destroy much of the masonry;and so many people collected on this side that all the camp was put in commotion,saying that Christovao de Figueiredo had entered the city with his Portuguese.This was told to the King.Those in the city could not understand what was going on,nor how these people came to be in the King's service,until they recollected how on the day of the other fight the Portuguese had come,and then they considered themselves lost.For by the aid of those men the King's people came without fear to the wall,where already it was damaged in many places,because the city had its cannon so high up that these could do no injury to the men who were at the foot of the wall.The wall also was filled up inside with earth,and there were no cannon in the breaches.The people of the city whom up to that time they had killed had been supplied with stones which they had flung on the besiegers from the top of the wall,and with musquets and arrows,so that even if the King's men were able to reach the wall at all they were at least wounded;but as Christovao de Figueiredo with the Portuguese prevented the enemy from appearing at all on the wall,the Hindus were enabled to reach it at their ease.
Here you would have seen how the King's captains begged Christovao de Figueiredo to permit them one day to attack the Moors in his company,and he,in order to content the more honourable of them,went with them on those days.One day he divided his musqueteers into three companies and began to kill several amongst the Moors who showed themselves,insomuch that none durst be seen;and then the King's troops began,in these three divisions,to attack the wall with many pickaxes and crowbars,[561]and he sent to tell the rest that they should attack on their own account;and such was the result that the defenders of the city began to abandon the first line of fortification,and the women and children took refuge in the citadel.The captain of the city,seeing the dismay that had spread amongst his people,began to turn them back with encouraging words,and with some of them betook himself to that part of the wall which he saw was most severely pressed,begging them that they would come back to the wall and not be afraid.He was answered by some that at that point were those Franks[562]who were helping,and that as soon as any one showed himself he was a dead man;and he,wishing to see for himself where the Portuguese were,reached over with his body in front one of the embrasures and was killed with a musquet-shot that struck him in the middle of his forehead.It was said by the Moors that Christovao de Figueyredo had killed him,and they took notice of him (DERAO SYGNAES D ELLE).As soon as the captain was thus killed there was great lamentation in the city,and soon the wall was deserted,so that the men from the King's camp were left to do as they pleased with it;and they noticed the outcry that arose within and saw that there was no one defending the wall.They therefore retired to see what should happen,and left off fighting for that day.