“Who, Audric?” Alice repeated, firmer this time.
Again he did not answer. He rose to his feet, walked to the window and closed the shutters, before turning to face her.
“We should go.”
Alice was frustrated, nervous, bewildered, and most of all frightened. And yet, at the same time, she felt she had no choice.
She thought of Alais’ name on the Family Tree, separated by eight hundred years from her own. She pictured the symbol of the labyrinth, connecting them across time and space.
Two stories woven into one.
Alice picked up her belongings and followed Audric out into the remains of the fading day.
CHAPTER 75
Montsegur
MARC 1244
In their hiding place beneath the citadel, Alais and her three companions tried to blot out the agonised sound of the torture. But the shouts of pain and the horror penetrated even the thick rock of the mountain. The cries both of the dying and the survivors slid like monsters into her refuge.
Alais prayed for Rixende’s soul and for its return to God, for all her friends, good men and women, for the pity of it. All she could hope was that her plan had worked.
Only time would tell if Oriane had been deceived into thinking Alais and the Book of Words had been consumed by the fires.
So great a risk.
Alais, Harif and their guides were to remain in their stone tomb until nightfall and the evacuation of the citadel was completed. Then, under cover of darkness, the four fugitives would make their way down the precipitous mountain paths and head for Los Seres. If their luck held, she’d be home by dusk tomorrow.
They were in clear breach of the terms of the truce and surrender, if they were caught, retribution would be swift and brutal, Alais had no doubt. The cave was barely more than a fold in the rock, shallow and close to the surface. If soldiers searched the citadel thoroughly, they were sure to be discovered.
Alais bit her lip at the thought of her daughter. In the darkness, she felt Harif reach for her hand. His skin was dry and dusty, like the desert sands.
“Bertrande is strong,” he said, as if he knew what distressed her. “She is like you, e? Her courage will hold. Soon, you will be together again. It’s not long to wait.”
“But she’s so young, Harif, too young to witness such things. She must be so frightened…”
“She is brave, Alais. Sajhe too. They will not fail us.”
If I knew you were right…
In the dark, her heart wracked with doubt and fear of what was to come, Alais sat dry-eyed, waiting for the day to pass. The anticipation, not knowing what was happening up above, was almost more than she could bear. The thought of Bertrande’s pale, white face continued to haunt her.
And the screaming of the Bons Homes as the fire took them went on in her head for a long time after the last victim had fallen silent.
A huge cloud of acrid black smoke was hovering like a storm cloud over the valley, blotting out the day.
Sajhe held Bertrande’s hand tightly as they walked through the Great Gate and out of the castle that had been their home for nearly two years.
He’d locked his pain deep inside his heart, in a place where the Inquisitors could not reach it. He would not grieve for Rixende now. He could not fear for Alais now. He must concentrate on protecting Bertrande and seeing them both safely returned to Los Seres.
The Inquisitors’ tables were ready at the bottom of-the slopes. The process was to start immediately, in the shadow of the pyre. Sajhe recognised Inquisitor Ferrier, a man loathed throughout the region for his rigid adherence to both the spirit and the letter of ecclesiastical law. He slipped his eyes to the right where Ferrier’s partner stood. Inquisitor Duranti was no less feared.
He held Bertrande’s hand tighter.
When they got on to the flatter ground, Sajhe realised they were dividing the prisoners up. Old men, members of the garrison and boys were being sent one way, the women and children another. He felt a flash of fear. Bertrande was going to have to face the Inquisitors without him.
She sensed the change in him and looked up, frightened, into his face. What’s happening? What are they going to do to us?“
“Brava, they are interrogating the men and the women separately,” he said. “Don’t worry. Answer their questions. Be brave and stay exactly where you are until I come for you. Don’t go anywhere, with anyone else, you understand? No one else at all.”
“What will they ask me?” she said in a small voice.
“Your name, your age,” Sajhe replied, going over the details she was to hold in her mind one more time. “I’m known as a member of the garrison, but there is no reason for them to associate us together. When they ask you, say you do not know your father. Give Rixende as your mother and tell them you have lived all your life here at Montsegur. Whatever happens, do not mention Los Seres. Can you remember all this?”
Bertrande nodded.
“Good girl.” Then, trying to reassure her, he added: “My grandmother used to give me messages to take for her when I was no older than you are now. She used to make me repeat them back several times until she was sure I was word perfect.”
Bertrande gave a thin smile. “Mama says your memory is terrible. Like a sieve, she says.”
“She’s right,” he said, then grew serious again. “They might also ask you some questions about the Bons Homes and what they believe. Answer as honestly as you can. That way, you are less likely to contradict yourself. There’s nothing you can tell them they won’t already have heard from someone else.” He hesitated and added one last reminder. “Remember. Do not mention Alais or Harif at all.”
Bertrande’s eyes filled with tears. “What if the soldiers search the citadel and find her?” she said, her voice rising in panic. What will they do if they find them?“
“They won’t,” he replied quickly. “Remember, Bertrande. When the Inquisitors have finished with you, stay exactly where you are. I will come and find you as soon as I can.”
Sajhe barely had time to finish his sentence when a guard jabbed him in the back and forced him further down the hill towards the village. Bertrande was sent in the opposite direction.
He was taken to a wooden pen, where he saw Pierre-Roger de Mirepoix, the commander of the garrison. He had already been interrogated. It was a good sign to Sajhe’s mind, a courtesy. It suggested the terms of the surrender were being honoured and the garrison were being treated as prisoners of war, not criminals.
As he joined the crowd of soldiers waiting to be called forward, Sajhe slipped his stone ring from his thumb and concealed it beneath his clothes. He felt strangely naked without it. He had rarely removed it since Harif bestowed it upon him twenty years before.
The interrogations were taking place inside two separate tents. The friars were waiting with yellow crosses to attach to the backs of those who’d been found guilty of fraternising with heretics, and then the prisoner was taken to a secondary holding area beyond, like animals at a market.
It was clear they did not intend to release anyone until everybody, from the oldest to the youngest, had been questioned. The process could take days.
When Sajhe’s turn came, he was allowed to walk unaccompanied into the tent. He stopped before Inquisitor Ferrier and waited.
Ferrier’s waxen face expressed nothing. He demanded Sajhe’s name, his age, his rank and his home town. The goose quill scratched over the parchment.
“Do you believe in Heaven and Hell?” he said abruptly.
“I do.”
“Do you believe in Purgatory?”
“I do.”
“Do you believe the Son of God was made perfect Man?”
“I’m a soldier, not a monk,” he replied, keeping his eyes to the ground.