The Galles and their friends backed away. “You can’t do this,” one said, over and over.
Another began screaming for the watch.
Blanche’s head began to work again. However black the man might be, and dressed like a foreign unbeliever, he’d saved more than her life. And the watch, whatever she might say, would side with upper class men over a dirty woman and a foreigner. Unless they were very lucky and got someone she knew, like Edmund.
Very carefully-he was unbelievably lethal, and his stillness was as terrifying as his colour-she moved behind him. She talked to him as if he was a horse, sure that he couldn’t speak her language.
“If you come with me-just come. I’m not going to hurt you-passing behind you, kind sir. Come along with me.” She passed behind him, well within the lethal range of his curved blade. Her knees were watery and her hands shook and her wrist throbbed with a sick kind of pain, but she bit down on the urge to be weak.
Like a skittish horse, she knew she had his attention by the tilt of his head.
She passed behind him, out of the mouth of the alley, stepped past the dead man who lay there and heard people coming.
“Come!” she said.
In the far distance, she heard “Watch, watch!” bellowed.
“Come!” she shouted. He was not moving.
She turned. She’d tried. Down the hill lay Cheapside and safety.
“Come on!” she called. She extended a hand-a damaged, blood-soaked hand. It was swelling already.
He flicked her a glance-and moved. He stooped over one of his victims and picked up the man’s hat, and in two strides, he’d cleaned his sword with the hat, tossed it aside and returned the curved blade to his scabbard without looking.
She began to run.
He followed her.
Her wrist began to throb, and every long stride hurt it more, and she tried to catch it in her left, and that hurt-she screamed. She hadn’t meant to, but her scream came out with the pain and she was kneeling in the street. Now one of her knees hurt, too.
Another armed man had appeared.
He had a naked sword in his hand, and he was as tall as a tree and almost as wide as a house.
She shuddered in relief, because everyone in her part of Harndon knew Ser Ricar Orcsbane, Knight of the Order.
But even as her vision tunnelled, she knew she could not let go.
She got her head up.
“Ser Ricar!” she said. “Oh, Christ-he saved me, ser knight.”
Ser Ricar was under a vow of silence. He looked at the paynim. He kept his long sword between them.
“He saved me, you hear me, ser? Galles attacked me-Sweet Virgin, mother of God-” She was babbling, and somehow, she was listening to herself babble from a great distance and the pain was ebbing and flowing like a tide.
She moaned, and tried to sit up.
They were of a height, the two men-one pale and red haired, with freckles across his enormous nose, and the other black as pitch with indigo added. The Ifriquy’an’s nose was smaller and finer, but otherwise, they were a measure of wide shoulders and narrow waists. Their swords were a match, too.
Both looked at the girl who had fallen forward over her knees. Both kept their swords up, between them, with the ease of long familiarity.
And neither spoke.
In the near distance, voices cried for the watch.
Ser Ricar gave the very slightest bow. Then, like an uncoiling spring, he sheathed his sword and bent, lifting the fallen woman as if she was made of feathers.
She stiff-armed him with her uninjured left hand. “Don’t touch me!” she spat, though she heard herself say it from a distance. “I can walk!”
The infidel allowed himself a smile. He inclined his head, and his sword vanished into the mouth of its scabbard.
The Knight of the Order released Blanche and stepped back, hands held up.
Blanche got to her feet. “I’ll get myself there,” she said grimly.
The Knight of the Order gave her a bow-respect, admonition, concurrence-it was a very expressive bow. And then he turned and ran down the hill toward Cheapside, Blanche trailing, stumbling, but managing her legs the way a mother might manage wayward children, and, last, the infidel.
Albans, like many folk, have never been fond of what they don’t know. Hence, the new Archbishop of Lorica was almost always referred to as the “new bishop” as if newness itself was something disgraceful.
The new bishop, Bohemund de Foi, was a Galle. This, too, led to an illogical prejudice. Most of the population of Harndon had names that indicated a Gallish origin; merchants and apprentices and nobles, too. Under the Semples lay Saint Pols. Under the Dentermints lay D’Entre Deux Monts. Six hundred years of prosperous trade between Harndoners and their Gallish cousins should have built trust and love, but it hadn’t, and despite Gallish fashions, Gallish swords, and Gallish Bible covers in every home, Galles were often the subject of biting witticisms or even riots, and the new bishop’s origins would have told against him had he been of saintly and humble demeanour.
In fact, the opinion of the people kept the young Archbishop of Lorica in a state of constant ferment. He was booed in the street, he had clods of earth thrown at his palanquin, and when one of his priests was accused of some very venal flirtation with one of the boys in the ritual choir of the cathedral, the man was badly beaten by apprentices.
So it was in no humble or contrite mood that the most powerful cleric in Alba met with his political ally and cousin, Jean de Vrailly, and his household. Present at de Vrailly’s table was his other cousin, the Count D’Eu; the Sieur de Rohan, whose power at court was beginning to eclipse de Vrailly’s own; and Ser Eustace l’Isle d’Adam, a rising star among de Vrailly’s knights.
De Rohan was the last to arrive and the first to speak. “I have under my hand the good squire Maurice d’Evereoux,” he said, indicating a young man standing in the doorway. “He is prepared to report on the latest outrage perpetrated by the Queen’s people. I am very sorry to tell you gentlemen that four of our people have been killed.”
The Archbishop’s hand went to his throat-the other men present touched their swords.
“What killed them?” de Vrailly spat.
“A woman-one of the Queen’s tire women-summoned a daemon on a public street. The daemon killed four of our noble squires. When our people attempted to pursue the thing, a knight of the so-called ‘Order of Saint Thomas’ was seen, sword in hand, defending the thing.”
The Count D’Eu leaned back, an enigmatic smile on his face. “If it killed four of our squires, messieurs, why did it need defence?”
De Rohan shot him a look full of scorn. “My lord, why ask such a thing? I merely relate the events as they happen.”
D’Eu laughed softly. “Do you know Blanche Gold?” he asked. “I do not think that the notion that she conjured a daemon is going to play especially well.” He looked around. “Not least as it’s a fairly obvious lie.”
De Rohan shot to his feet. “Do you, monsieur, give me the lie?”
D’Eu didn’t stir. “Yes,” he said. “I say you lie.” He nodded to his cousin. “He is lying on purpose, to make trouble.”
De Rohan’s face carried honest, blank amazement.
De Vrailly frowned in distaste. “I wish you would not speak so of the good de Rohan in public; he seeks only to serve.”
“Does he indeed, cousin?” D’Eu rose. “I offer to fight you, de Rohan-right now. By the Law of War.”
D’Eu was in his harness. De Rohan wore the long pointed shoes and short gown of a courtier.
Jean de Vrailly nodded, jaw outthrust. “I take your point, fair cousin. Monsieur de Rohan, you will kindly return to wearing your armour on all but formal occasions. We must remind the court at all times what we represent-the manly virtues that their effeminacy has forgotten.”
D’Eu shook his head. “Nay, cousin, I mean it. This gossipy viper has nothing in his head but the destruction of the Queen and the smearing of her reputation. I say he lies. I offer to prove it on him, with my sword.” D’Eu leaned back. “Par Dieu, I’ll even let him put on his harness-if he can find it.”