Blades of Valor

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Blades of Valor Page 4

by Sigmund Brouwer


  In his confusion, Thomas groaned, loudly enough to draw attention from the rider nearby. So Thomas quickly patted his belly, as if the groan had resulted from a poorly digested breakfast.

  Then he returned to his thoughts. If I am not yet trusted, why reveal anything? Sir William had had months in Magnus, ample time to draw him aside in privacy. Katherine, too, in Magnus had had many opportunities to do the same. Why give me answers now and not then?

  Thomas groaned again and ignored any glances.

  Were the answers in the package entrusted to him? Not for the first time did he consider unsealing it.

  No. Thomas repeated the arguments he had given himself. Were Sir William and Katherine foes, they would have given him nothing that might benefit his journey. Were they friends, then unsealing the package would cost him their allegiance.

  Thomas closed his eyes briefly. Should I trust them? Enough strange events had occurred so he might full well believe they were Druids, determined to locate his treasure of priceless books.

  His only choice was to play this game to its end. And now the bait promised him was nothing less than the father he had long believed dead.

  Nine

  The caravan moved south along the flat road of the coastal plains. Far ahead, high, rounded hills, blue with distant haze, shimmered against the backdrop of an almost white sky.

  The heat seemed an attacker. Each time Thomas wiped his face and exposed his skin to the scorching air, he breathed gratitude at the layers of fine, light cloth that trapped cooler air close to his body. Long before the sun passed its highest point, one of the waterskins made from calf leather tied to his saddle was half empty.

  Much more difficult than the heat for Thomas was the evil of watching the slaves stumble alongside the camels. There were a dozen; they, too, wore the layers of white for the desert heat, and they, too, had covered heads against the blazing white sun, for Muzzamar knew dead slaves were of little value in Damascus.

  They were marked different, however, by the single rope that attached one to the other. This rope was looped around each neck, so that when one fell, he risked dragging the others down. When one slowed, he himself risked strangulation.

  Thomas noted, too, that they had no skins of water, and he vowed to ease their thirst as soon as he could.

  Muzzamar, at the front of the caravan, finally raised his sword to call a halt when the lead camels reached a stand of trees that hugged a wide well.

  Thomas did not dismount until he had loosened two of his waterskins from the saddle.

  He nearly fell when his feet first touched the packed sand road. Sitting motionless for so long in the heat had cramped his legs, and it took effort to straighten them.

  Thomas ignored the scowl of the slavemaster—for the heavy waterskins were obvious in his hands—and moved to the first of the slaves. He had been warned by both Sir William and Muzzamar not to draw attention to himself, but he knew the men on foot must be in agony.

  “Take this,” Thomas said as he held out the waterskin, “then pass it along.”

  The slave lifted his head. Dark eyes, glazed with exhaustion, now opened wide with surprise. The slave hesitated, briefly, then snatched the leather bag from Thomas and gulped water.

  Thomas waited, then realized the slave had no intention of ending his drink, so he gently grabbed the slave’s wrists and pulled the waterskin away.

  Thomas carried the waterskin to the next slave. While that slave drank, Thomas tried to ignore the oozing rope burns around the slave’s neck.

  Then to the next. And the next. Until he reached the last slave held by that rope, the terrible line of death.

  Unlike the other slaves, this one did not open his hands gladly to receive the waterskin.

  “Take this.” Thomas urged the waterskin on the man.

  “You risk your life,” the slave answered, head still down.

  Thomas stepped back in surprise. The man spoke English.

  “Among these men, it is considered a weakness to show mercy,” the slave continued. “And we will be fed and watered at nightfall, for they have no wish to kill us.”

  “You speak English!”

  The slave redirected his stare from the ground to Thomas, and the eyes that rose were not the deep brown of these darker people, but a blue so piercing it almost startled Thomas.

  “I speak English because I am English,” the man said in a low voice. “Find it not so amazing. Many of us are doomed in this strange land, the long forgotten of a forsaken Crusade. I had avoided capture for ten years.”

  The man shrugged. His face showed no expression. It was an older face of a man equal to Thomas in height. How old, Thomas could only guess, but as the wind tugged against the cloth that protected the man’s head, Thomas saw edges of gray at the temples of the man’s dark hair. The wrinkles around the man’s mouth and eyes had not yet deepened enough to show shadow. His nose was crooked in several places, as if it had been broken more than once. What little of his teeth flashed during his quiet words showed them to be straight and without gaps—the man had not eaten poorly while he avoided capture.

  “Ahead,” the man finished, “lies what tomorrow brings.”

  Thomas again pushed the waterskin toward the slave. This time the water was accepted, with another shrug. The slave drank slowly, then returned the water.

  “You are too young to have arrived with the last Crusaders,” the man said. “Yet your command of their tongue tells me you are not a new arrival to this land. And you are not among us slaves, so your story must be one of interest,” the man finished.

  The man spoke his insight with casual tones. Thomas nodded stiffly to conceal his growing interest.

  “Do not attempt to help me escape,” the man said calmly.

  Said thus, an unexpected statement with the same lack of passion as all the man’s other words, the advice had the impact of a physical blow. For indeed, Thomas was contemplating that same subject.

  Before Thomas could protest, the man fixed him with those uncanny eyes and unhurriedly spoke more.

  “We are fellow countrymen. And, methinks, men of the same breed, for cowards and thieves would not stray across a world to enter the Holy Land.” The man raised his voice slightly. “Yet do not offer your help. Even should you succeed, with me you would become a hunted outlaw with noplace to hide.”

  A deep laugh greeted that remark.

  “Well spoken, Lord Baldwin!” The words came from behind them in Arabic, for Muzzamar had approached quietly and unseen to Thomas. “Words spoken on my behalf?”

  Muzzamar clapped Thomas on the back. “Lord Baldwin saw me, of course. But it is still advice worth heeding. For you are a stranger among us, and I suspect you know little of our history.”

  Muzzamar took Thomas by his elbow. “Come with me into the shade. For we have a little time before our journey resumes.”

  Thomas glanced at Lord Baldwin. The older man nodded slightly, a gesture that seemed a farewell among equals.

  Muzzamar spoke as he guided Thomas back to the trees. “You know, by now, of the Mamelukes. Two centuries ago, slaves to the Egyptians overthrew their masters, and later they overthrew the foreigners who built fortresses and castles all across this land.”

  The trader pointed east. “In those hills, as you might know, stood the great Crusader castles. The greatest, known as Saphet, commanded the very road we travel. The Mamelukes had laid siege and promised safe passage to the knights upon their surrender. Yet when the gates of the castle were opened, every knight was beheaded upon the spot.”

  Muzzamar examined Thomas for his reaction.

  “So you see”—Muzzamar’s smile was nearly a caress of cruelty, and Thomas understood with a chill how different the culture of this land was—“we cannot afford to anger the Mamelukes. To our enemies, we are equally ruthless. And neither we, nor the Mamelukes, show the softness of the English.”

  Muzzamar tapped the near-empty waterskin Thomas still held.

  �
�We do not provide comfort to our enemies, and we show no mercy to those who betray us.” Muzzamar’s smile did not change. “Take the advice offered by Lord Baldwin. Journey along your own path. I have guaranteed your safety because I have accepted gold. And I am no common bandit. I will deliver you as promised.

  “But should you become an enemy,” Muzzamar continued evenly, “you will have the choice of death or slavery. And death would be more pleasant.”

  Ten

  On the eve of the third day of travel, Muzzamar visited Thomas in his tent.

  “My young friend,” Muzzamar said, beaming, “tonight, we shall feast.”

  “Even more?” Thomas said. He finished drying his face. It had felt wonderful to wash away the day’s dust and sweat in the basin supplied by servant girls. “Surely you cannot exceed the goat’s milk curds and dried figs that have sustained us thus far.”

  Muzzamar frowned, then laughed with understanding. “A jest!”

  With a return smile, Thomas nodded. A jest indeed. For the previous few days of travel had been at a forced pace. Tents had not been raised at nightfall, nor cooking fires lit. Sleep had been short and in open air. The entire caravan had always been ready to move.

  “Truly,” Muzzamar said, “our people do not always eat in such a manner. And tonight, you shall taste our finest.”

  “No danger of bandits tonight?” Thomas asked. “Nor of Mameluke soldiers?”

  “We are well into the Valley of Jezreel,” Muzzamar said, as if this explained all.

  “My apologies for ignorance,” Thomas said. “You have been greatly occupied, and there have been no others to inform me of matters of the journey.”

  “Of course, of course,” Muzzamar said. “My own apologies for neglect of an honored guest. Yet we were in bandit-infested country, and my first duty was survival of the caravan.

  “The passage into this valley is well guarded by those hills. It favors large groups of bandits. Naturally, we are able to protect ourselves, but only at great cost, and to tarry in those hills provides the bandits unnecessary temptation. But now …”

  Muzzamar swept his arms wide. “Now we are in the open valley. And more so, a caravan of traders on its way to St. Jean d’Acre has joined us in its passing. There is safety away from the hills, and safety in numbers, Thomas. We shall rest here and feast. You will be welcome at the feast, for it is hardly likely that Mameluke soldiers will appear at night to inspect the caravan.”

  “How long will we rest?” Thomas asked. Thoughts of Nazareth and Sir William and Katherine and his father filled his every waking moment.

  “The road to your destination is only a day’s travel,” Muzzamar said. “Well within sight of Mount Tabor. From there, two of my men will guide you north into the hills to Nazareth.”

  Muzzamar caught the darkness that crossed Thomas’s face.

  “Come, come, Thomas. Have no fears. We have successfully passed through the dangerous country. As a small group, you and my guides will easily avoid Mameluke soldiers on the road to Nazareth. Now, your arrival there is a certainty.”

  Thomas forced a smile. For his fears had not been of arrival, but what might occur after.

  Thomas groaned as he laid his head to rest. The sealed package he had sworn to guard for Sir William was wrapped in a blanket and served as his pillow.

  How could he possibly sleep?

  Muzzamar’s promise of a feast had been only a hint of the actual events of the evening. There had been tambourine dancing by veiled girls, rich meats and sweets, and servants pouring wine and delivering food, all to ensure the feasters need only sit and eat. Thomas himself had gorged, urged on by a servant who, it seemed, tended only to him.

  His stomach, overfull with unaccustomed delicacies, rumbled threats of rebellion. Even as he finally drifted into sleep, Thomas tossed fitfully.

  His dreams, too, gave him little rest.

  He stood upon a high hill, shrouded in gray mist. The mist swirled, then cleared, and rays of sunshine broke through from behind him, sunshine that lit an entire city across the deep valley, so that the beams of light danced golden and silver on the curved towers above whitened square houses that spread in all directions along the plateau of the mountain.

  From the city walls emerged a dark figure, small with distance. The figure slowly moved closer, so that Thomas could see it was a large man, yet the man’s face was without feature.

  The peace Thomas felt to behold this city of dreams began to disappear, and in its place emerged a trembling panic—panic that grew stronger as the figure approached, stronger as Thomas struggled to identify the man’s face.

  Thomas moaned with a fear he could not explain.

  “Thomas, my son!” the figure called. The man was now close enough so that Thomas could see the wrinkles of the dark cloth folded around him. But still, the face was featureless and gray.

  “Thomas, my son!” the stranger called again. “Are you an Immortal?”

  Thomas tried to reply, but he could not speak, his fear and panic so great. There was something so threatening about this stranger who claimed to be his father that Thomas tried to reach for the sword at his side, but his hands were powerless. He stood mute and frozen.

  “Thomas! Are you an Immortal?”

  The figure transformed into a dragon, yet before Thomas could scream, the dragon became Sir William, swirling out of the mists with a sword upraised.

  Thomas tried to lift his arm against the blow, and as the sword came down, a truncated roar sounded from behind him, for the sword had struck a lion that now snarled defiance against death.

  As Thomas turned back to thank Sir William, he caught the scent of perfume. The knight was not there. Instead, it was Katherine, her hair almost a halo of brightness from the sun. She reached for Thomas and he sobbed with relief.

  Her arms pulled him close and she kissed him and a flare of ecstasy filled him, yet something was wrong. Her kiss was one of death, for now he could not breathe, and she would not pull away.

  He struggled, trying to push her away, but his arms were still trapped at his side, and she only pressed harder.

  Breath, find breath, for he must live …

  Thomas opened his eyes wide in panic. For a single heartbeat, he relaxed. It had only been a dream.

  Yet he still could not breathe. And above him, a giant of a man blocked the flickering light of the tent lamp.

  In the next heartbeat of awareness, he realized a heavy open hand pressed down upon his mouth and nostrils.

  “Silence or death,” a voice whispered.

  To fulfill that promise, the figure above placed the tip of a knife against Thomas’s throat.

  “Silence or death,” the voice repeated. “Nod if you choose life.”

  Thomas nodded. The slightness of that movement proved the sharpness of the knife and the seriousness of the intruder; Thomas felt the knife’s tip break skin.

  The hand over his nose and mouth was removed.

  Thomas drew breath, but slowly, for he did not want the intruder to consider a gasp to be unnecessary noise.

  Several more heartbeats passed until the figure eased backward and the pressure of the knife left Thomas’s throat.

  “We leave camp,” the voice said. “You will not return. If we are caught, we both die.”

  Eleven

  Thomas nodded again and hoped his agreement would be visible in the dimness of the tent.

  He dressed hurriedly, careful to place around his neck the long strap that held his pouch of gold beneath the clothing. When ready moments later, Thomas reached for the sealed package that had served as his pillow, for even the threat of death did not take its importance from his mind.

  “Do not forget your sword,” the voice said. “For you shall travel alone and without friends.”

  Thomas took the sword, grateful that this stranger would not see it as a threat.

  And why fight now? For if the stranger had meant harm, Thomas would already be dead in his sleep.
r />   The stranger turned. Thomas followed.

  They moved between the tents. Something seemed unnatural, and it did not take long for Thomas to understand. The camp did not stir with the slight movements of guards at night, the occasional scurrying of servant girls, the restless muttering of slaves in their tortured sleep. Only the grunts and stampings of the camels showed any life.

  The stranger led Thomas away from the edge of the caravan.

  To their left was the camp of the other caravan, the traders headed for St. Jean d’Acre. This camp, too, was unnaturally still.

  The stranger continued his steady pace away from the camps.

  Thomas held his questions.

  Five long minutes they traveled.

  The sky above was ebony black, broken by brilliant diamonds of starlight. The moon was high and full, and cast enough pale light for Thomas to see the outlines of the far hills.

  Finally, the figure stopped and turned.

  “It does not matter my name,” the stranger said. “I was among the slaves. Yet we were not slaves. Rather bandits, biding our time.”

  “Band—”

  The stranger held up his hand. “I have little time until my absence is discovered. What I can explain is this. It is well known that Muzzamar’s caravan has many riches and is too well guarded for attack. Instead of raiding, we chose to pose as slaves until Muzzamar believed himself safe. The cook was bribed before we departed St. Jean d’Acre, before we let ourselves be put into bondage. And this night? As planned long before, all the food of the feast was drugged. It was great fortune that brought us the other caravan to be plundered as well.”

  The stranger smiled as a look of comprehension crossed Thomas’s face. Time and again his plate had been filled before he could rise to join Muzzamar and the others with their feasting. And each time his plate had been filled by a large slave.

  “Yes,” the figure said as if reading Thomas’s thoughts. “I ensured that you were kept from the food that all others ate. They sleep now. It was a simple matter for the cook to release us from our bonds and supply us with their very own weapons. It is an easy way for us to plunder, much simpler than open attack from the hills.”

 

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