Mark of the Black Arrow
Page 14
Marian had taken her up the narrow trail through the wood, trying to get ahead of the bishop. Looking down the long slope of the ridge she saw a carriage pull from the forest into the same sunlight she enjoyed. The driver wore the brown robe of a monk, and the team of horses trailed purple streamers from their harnesses.
Leaning over Merryweather’s withers, she clucked her tongue and tapped her heels into the horse’s flanks. Merryweather took her lead and began to trot down the other side of the ridge, heading across the open pass toward the monastery that stood solid and wide, surrounded by sunlit fields of monks working their crops.
By the time she reached the gate of the monastery’s corral, she needed a long drink of water. Merryweather agreed, walking straight up to the trough and dropping her muzzle into it. Marian tossed her leg over the horse’s neck and slid down her side. She considered scooping some of the water for herself, but decided against it.
A monk jogged along the track she’d just ridden, one hand holding up his long monk’s habit. He stumbled to a stop beside her, dropping forward to put his hands on his knees as he gulped air in great draughts. She looked down on the top of his head. His tonsure had plastered thickly to the shaved portion, held down by sweat and turned ruddy brown instead of what she believed would be a bright ginger when dry.
“Are you alright, Father?” she asked.
He nodded, sweat flinging off his scalp. He took a deep breath and straightened, blowing it out before looking at her. His eyes rolled from her face down to her ankles, and then jerked violently away.
“What brings you here this day, milady?” he asked.
“I need to see the cardinal.”
“Ummmmm…” The monk scratched his neck where the robe had rubbed a thin red crease. He paused as if to gather words, but only repeated the humming sound from his chest.
Anger flared inside her. “What is the trouble?” she demanded. “Is the cardinal here?”
“Yes, milady,” the man responded. “He is.”
“Then take me to him.”
Still the monk hesitated, glancing at her, then the ground, then back at her before motioning for her to follow him. He led her in through a door to a small room. It contained a bench, and not another stick of furniture. A single window, covered in oilskin, let in the sunlight.
“Stay here please,” he said. “I will return with the cardinal.”
Before she could agree, he darted out the door, shutting it firmly behind him.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
The room was narrow, but Marian found the bench uncomfortable, and so she paced back and forth, leaving tracks in the dirt floor. As each moment passed anxiety gnawed at her stomach. She stopped moving, and jumbled thoughts rattled through her head
Will I be turned away like a fool?
Dismissed as a child?
Ignored as a woman?
Just as she began to pace again, the door opened. The cardinal stepped inside, his face creased with worry. To her surprise, Friar Tuck squeezed in behind him.
She knelt and crossed herself.
“Enough of that, child,” the cardinal said. She rose and he indicated the bench. Dutifully she sat on the end of the hard seat, giving him plenty of room to sit beside her.
“Your Eminence, I apologize for coming unannounced,” she said, “and demanding this audience.”
“I can only assume that it is urgent,” he replied.
“It is.”
“Then it is good that I am here.”
“I was afraid the father I spoke with wasn’t going to allow me to see you.”
The cardinal chuckled. “Well, you did cause a bit of a stir. The good brothers here are unused to seeing a woman wearing such attire.”
Marian looked down and blushed. Her clothes covered her, but they also clung to her like a second skin. Good for riding, yet inappropriate for a monastery. Before she could speak to apologize, the cardinal seemed to read her mind, and held up his hand.
“All is well,” he assured her. “Tell me, to what do I owe this visit, milady?”
She glanced at Friar Tuck. The cardinal followed her gaze, then looked back at her.
“Do not concern yourself,” he said. “The good friar has my full trust. You should regard him as you do myself.” Looking back at Tuck, he added, “Plus he makes an excellent doorstop, should anyone feel the need to join us.”
Friar Tuck rolled his eyes, but he did it with a small smile. Moving to the closed door, he leaned heavily against it.
Marian nodded slowly, then cleared her throat.
“Your Eminence, Prince John has ordered that all of the religious tapestries at the castle be torn down,” she said, the words tumbling out. “When I confronted him about it, he… well, he threatened me.”
Friar Tuck crossed himself. The cardinal’s mouth formed a hard line.
“There’s more,” she said.
“There always is,” the cardinal responded.
“When I entered the king’s study, I found the prince reading a parchment. He tried to hide it from me, but I did get a glimpse of it. It was written in a language unknown to me, but I managed to memorize a few symbols that appeared on the page.”
“Could you describe them?” the cardinal asked.
“It would be easier to draw them.” Kneeling beside the bench, Marian began to draw the first symbol in the dirt. With each drag of her finger, it felt as if a band tightened around her skull, cinching with each stroke. She had nearly finished the symbol when the cardinal reached out and seized her hand hard enough to grind her knuckles together.
Startled, she let out a little cry and glanced up at him.
“I’m not finished,” she said.
“Were you about to draw a line through the middle of it?” he asked.
“Yes, that would complete the symbol.”
He pulled her back up onto the bench, kicking the symbol clear in the dirt. “Then thank Christ that I stopped you. That symbol is unholy. It is used by those who practice black magic.”
A chill raced up her spine. “Does such magic truly exist?” She had heard of such things, but had never seen evidence of them with her own eyes.
The cardinal nodded solemnly.
“And you are certain that this symbol relates to it?”
“Yes.” He stroked his chin, silent for a long moment. “Can you describe the other symbols? Drawing them is too much risk.”
She did her best, and the cardinal’s jaw tightened with each word. So did the pressure in her head.
Finally her memory was exhausted, and the pressure softened.
“What are they used for?” she asked.
“They are symbols used to conjure and control,” he replied. “Most often the object of their use is some sort of dark entity, something monstrous. Some such creatures have been known to poison the very earth beneath their feet.”
“Surely the prince would not call upon such a thing,” she exclaimed. She didn’t like or trust her uncle, but what the cardinal suggested was incomprehensible.
“I would be certain of nothing at this moment,” the cardinal said, “except that danger has come upon us all, and there are very few who remain to stand and fight.” He shared a significant look with Friar Tuck. “I must think and pray and plan.”
“There is still one thing you don’t know,” Marian said.
“Tell me, child.”
“The king has left his fastest ship at my disposal, to summon him home in the event of an emergency.”
The cardinal frowned, saying nothing.
Tuck pushed off the door. “He is still at sea, traveling in heavily-laden vessels,” the friar offered. “He could be caught by a lighter ship.”
The cardinal shook his head. “We don’t have anything that we can show him as proof, other than a few missing tapestries. I warned him of the dangers of leaving the land unprotected, that a darkness approached, but he chose to go anyway. I’m afraid we’ll need much more damning evidence than we have of J
ohn’s wickedness.”
Marian knew he was right, even if she wasn’t happy about it. Richard had placed John in control, and she knew him well enough to trust that the decision had not been made lightly. They needed proof that evil was taking root in the heart of the kingdom. She only prayed that they found it before it was too late.
Friar Tuck looked at her thoughtfully. “When the time does come, choose carefully the messenger you send. This might be the one chance we have to undo our fate.”
The cardinal nodded. “Wise advice.”
The words of both men weighed heavily on Marian. “What are you not telling me?” she asked. “Do not dare to hold back. King Richard kept me privy to his court and I have proven myself capable. Grant me the same respect you would any man.”
“It is not a lack of respect, Marian, but a fear for your safety.”
The cardinal sighed and fell silent, studying her.
Finally he answered.
“There are prophecies that tell of a time of darkness, when evil will be unleashed upon England,” he said. “This malicious force, if left unchecked, will spread across the land, and then the world. The prophetess, Bernadette of Avignon, had a vision regarding it. She said in her writings, ‘The lion of the north will range from his home and the jackals of the devil will be free to ravage at their leisure until nothing is left of the land or the people.’ She continued in more detail, but you can see what she meant.”
“You believe this is that time?” she asked.
“Prophecy is tricky,” he said. “But yes, all the signs and portents lead me to believe it is true.”
Marian’s mouth turned down.
“What is wrong?” he asked.
“I mean no disrespect, Your Eminence—you are far more learned than I—but I have studied the scripture and the writings of the church fathers, including the Revelation of St. John, and even St. Irenaeus.”
Friar Tuck started, his wide shoulders jerking. “You’ve read Irenaeus?”
Her mouth pursed and her eyes narrowed. “Yes I have, and I understood it, as well.”
The monk raised his large hands. “I meant it not like that. I thought the only copy of his writings was held here.”
“The king had one in his private library, purchased from a convent somewhere in the land of Gaul.” A thought pinged through her mind. If John seeks to harm those, I shall…
No appropriate punishment occurred to her.
The cardinal raised his hand, gaining their attention once more. “There are words written by mystics of the church that very few have read. Their prophecies are considered controversial, sometimes even heresy. The Holy See keeps them only for their own records. I have spent my life chasing these—I am fascinated and I do not pretend otherwise. It is frowned upon by my brethren, and yet I still search.” He put his hand on her arm lightly. “I have lived three times and ten your lifetime. I have read prophecy from saints and heretics, madmen and scholars, pagan and Christian alike. I have found threads that weave a disturbing tapestry, and I think we are on the cusp of a massive attempt by the dark to overtake the light.”
She stood. “Then we must not waste another minute. We must find proof of what we suspect and quickly, for all our sakes.”
* * *
Glynna Longstride stood in her kitchen alone. The girls were at the market with some of the servants and the men who were left were all out in the field. She could finally fulfill a goal she had long pursued in secret. Her trip to Adaryn had given her the final piece of the puzzle she needed.
She had sought out Adaryn when trying to get pregnant for the first time. It had been Lila’s suggestion, though she knew not how Lila was connected to the hedgewitch. Adaryn had given her some herbs to put in her wine and her husband’s on the next full moon. Nine months later Robert had been born, a male child and a blessing. Years later she had used herb potions to conceive both Rebecca and Ruth.
Robin had been a surprise, the only child conceived without use of any potions. It was a difficult pregnancy, far more painful than any of the other three. When he was born she had seen light pouring out of his eyes and mouth, and it had terrified her. If not for the intervention of her husband she would have killed the creature then and there.
After that she had carved the symbols into her bedchamber door and mixed the paint to be smeared into the wood, preventing the boy from crossing the threshold. When it worked she went back to Adaryn, seeking to learn more of the woman’s magic, to add to the cache her own mother had left within her.
Adaryn had been clear that she did not take students.
Glynna had been so furious she’d almost outed the woman as a witch, the way she had done with the whore who had been wet nurse to Robin as a babe. Fortunately she had thought the better of it. Adaryn had her uses, after all.
Then her mother died, having survived her father by several years, and Glynna discovered her grimoire. Buried in a trunk, it was hidden inside an old woolen cloak that was musty and molded. She did not know if her mother had ever used it, or if it was an antique passed down through the family. Glynna, though, had studied it thoroughly. Much of it was written in other languages, but there was enough that she could read and comprehend to prove to her that what she held was a true relic, a thing of power.
With her husband absent Glynna was able to do something she had long wanted to do. She had come straight home and carved the new symbols into the doorposts. She had mixed herbs in a bowl and sliced deep into the hollow below her wrist, bleeding into the mixture, using it to paint the doorposts on top and both sides. As she did so she was reminded of the Bible story of the Israelites getting ready to leave Egypt, and painting their door frames with lamb’s blood to keep out the Angel of Death. She wondered if her blood would only work on humans, or if it would even stop St. Azrael should he come to call. It was a comforting thought as she watched the red blood soak into the faded wood until it couldn’t be seen.
When that was done she walked inside and closed the door behind her. An excitement burned in her belly, not unlike the one she felt from time to time when her husband would take her in some room of the house other than their bedchambers. The risk of being caught always made the excitement exquisite. She quivered all over now, in the same type of anticipation.
She stripped naked and allowed herself a moment to revel in how freeing it was to be skyclad, even inside. She had cleared the top of a large, low table and knelt before it. Slowly, reverently, she began to place objects on top of it. Two candles flanked each end. In the center she put a bowl, the same one in which she’d mixed her blood with the herbs. Beside it she placed the dagger with which she’d opened her own vein. It was still stained with her blood, and just looking at it caused a surge of dark joy.
On the other side of the bowl she placed a small, carved figure that she had also found in her mother’s things. It was black as the night and had a twisted face that both attracted and repelled her. She found herself staring at it sometimes for hours at a time, and it was as though her mind went elsewhere when she did.
Next to the dagger she placed the sacred book with the spells she had been learning. Turning the hidebound cover, she opened the book and fingered through the parchment pages. Her fingertips tingled as they slid over the symbols and words. She left it open to an incantation that had long fascinated her—the shape of the words, the ink with which they were writ. It sank into the fiber of the paper, bonding with it. It was a reddish brown on the cream-colored parchment, and her eyes found the combination of the two pleasing.
Now she had a proper altar, one that was just for her. Now she could finally attempt some of the things of which she had only been able to dream.
The spell was simple, the words written to spell out the sounds. They were not English, not even similar. She had recited the syllables over and over in her mind, the noises of them rubbing along the inside of her soul.
She began rolling through the summoning without thinking about it, her lips moving just
enough to mouth the words. As the spell rolled off her lips she peered at the carved figure and for a moment she swore that she could feel the lightest of touches, like hands caressing her naked body. She closed her eyes and let the feeling wash over her, the touch increasingly more intimate, like some dark entity wanting to take her and make her its own.
Let me in.
She felt herself spreading in welcome as she threw her head back.
“Yes,” she whispered.
And with that, she was gone over the edge.
* * *
Adaryn arrived home just before sunset. As she stood for a moment, staring back toward Barnabas’ home, she fought back her own tears.
A sudden hoot from above her head caused her to jump. She looked upward. A large owl was perched on her roof, staring down at her with cold eyes. A shiver danced down her spine and she hurried into the house.
* * *
When Marian returned, it was with a renewed determination to watch her uncle like a hawk. She was convinced that he was up to something more than just destroying the tapestries. Without proof, though, Cardinal Francis was right—there was no use sending a messenger to Richard.
Murther was waiting when she pulled the horse to a stop outside the stable.
“Did you have a nice ride, Highness?” He held the mare’s head while Marian dismounted.
“Yes, thank you.”
She followed him inside the stable and watched as he opened Merryweather’s stall. Something dark flashed at the edge of her vision, causing her to take a hasty step backward. When she took a closer look, however, there was nothing there. She scanned the stable, but caught no other glimpse of it. Black on black, it had seemed.
Just a shadow, she thought, though she felt a shudder. Dismissing it, she hurried out of the stable without bothering to change back to her gown, her thoughts turning to Chastity and what might have happened in her absence.
She slipped into the castle through a side entrance used by the butcher and headed straight to her chamber, hoping the girl would be waiting for her there. When she walked in, however, she discovered Chastity on hands and knees, shoving something beneath Marian’s bed. A distinct scent of smoke filled the room.