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Demon Knight

Page 25

by Dave Duncan


  There was little satisfaction in being right. The only surprise in those waning days of April was that the Tartars stayed on in the city, with Sartaq making himself visible, delivering speeches, and generally behaving as a prince should, usually in the company of the new suzerain and his future bride. The Florentines drew comfort from their leaders’ courage and resolution, not dreaming that their city had become the Fiend’s primary objective. There was no word of Don Ramon and the Company cavalry, but the dieci never asked why he had disobeyed orders.

  Under the best conditions, seven leagues a day would grind down the toughest, best-trained army very quickly. Nevil was famous for forced marches that left a trail of dead men and horses by the roadside. When his western army reached Lucca and turned aside to advance up the Arno, he struck with the eastern force down the old Roman road through the Apennines. Toby had been wrong on only one detail—the Fiend did not destroy Bologna. In his haste to close the trap around Florence, he left it intact.

  The Chevalier was reported to have died of his wounds in Milan, but he had never been relevant. Sartaq made no move to replace him.

  As the last day of April dawned, Toby came limping back to Giovanni’s inn, which now acted as the Company’s casa. From long habit he shared a room with Hamish, and let him have the bed. He himself seemed to have no time for sleep at all anymore. He had been up all night and most of the previous night, supervising the final preparations. As he stripped and began organizing a shave, he was so tired that the world would not stay in focus.

  Hamish duly sat up and rubbed his eyes. “I’ve seen you before somewhere, haven’t I?”

  “Not recently. Do you happen to remember my name? It seems to have supped my mind.”

  “Genghis Caesar.” Hamish yawned, stretched, scratched, and reached for his shirt. “Don’t throw away that water. Anything happen in the night?”

  “Half a dozen scouts disappeared. Got too close and were eaten by demons, I expect. He’ll be here before noon.” Razor in hand, Toby turned to peer at his friend. “As of half an hour ago, the Siena road is still open. Nevil’s trying to cut it; he’s got a column of light cavalry heading across country to San Gimignano. He thinks they’re masked by gramarye, but Sorghie found them. They’re not there yet, so why don’t you go while the going’s good? I’m sure Sartaq will make a break for it and take Lisa with him.”

  Hamish leaned back on his elbows and studied his friend with a curious expression. “Do you think I’d do that?”

  “No. But I wish you would.”

  “Well I won’t. And I don’t think Sartaq will, either. Or Marradi. You’ve got the people convinced that Florence can hold out indefinitely. You’re the famous Longdirk, who’s never been beaten. Everyone’s persuaded you have something up your sleeve, that Naples and Milan and the others are marching to the rescue.”

  Nauseated, Toby went back to shaving. “I never told anyone that! It’s Sartaq, spirits forgive him! Keeping up morale is one thing, but holding people here for no real purpose when the city is doomed—that’s criminal!”

  “Have you said that to anyone but me?” Hamish pulled on his hose.

  “Of course not. It would cause a panic. But I don’t tell lies, either.” He couldn’t if he tried. His face would never deceive a blind horse.

  Hamish chuckled. “Doomed, you say?”

  “Doomed. I don’t lie to you, friend.”

  “Toby!” Hamish had to be very excited for his voice to squeak like that. “Be serious! You do have something up your sleeve, don’t you? It’s the amethyst, isn’t it? You’ve learned Rhym’s true name!”

  Toby forced himself to turn and look him in the eye. “No. No true name. Nothing up my sleeve. I swear.”

  Dawning belief made Hamish’s lips curl back in horror. “You must have! I’ve never known you to obey stupid orders before!”

  “I’d never promised to obey them before. This time I did. I have no choice.” Toby went back to shaving, having to stare at that failure peering at him out of the mirror.

  “Toby!” Even squeakier. “We’ve been friends for years. You can trust me!”

  “I do trust you. Hamish, I swear I have no secret plans. I can see no way out of this. Nevil is going to sack Florence. We are going to die. That is the honest truth, upon my soul. I’d prefer you didn’t tell anyone else, please.”

  After a moment’s silence, Hamish said, “I won’t breathe a word until after the wedding.”

  Toby almost chopped off his nose. “That’s still on?” He had forgotten. This must be the last day of April.

  “Yes, it’s still on. And we’re both invited.”

  “Well!” Toby said. “Why not?”

  41

  Toby Longdirk was a military genius, but he had some curious limitations. For weeks he had been striding around Florence, organizing the defenses to resist a siege, grinning all the time as if this were tremendous fun, laughing away fears, winking knowingly when asked what was going to happen. Then he professed surprise that people trusted him to work a miracle! He had complained to Hamish a thousand times that he was a lousy liar, when in fact his face was less scrutable than a badly eroded Etruscan terra-cotta funeral monument.

  But he did have something up his sleeve. He must have something up his sleeve! Hamish could not believe otherwise.

  Now he insisted that Lisa’s wedding had to be a diversion, a decoy. The Marradis, he said, having made grandiose preparations for a royal marriage and convinced the whole city that it would go ahead as planned, would vanish before the first guests arrived. Sartaq would flee with them, and it was just to be hoped that they would have the grace to take Lisa and her mother and not abandon them to the Fiend’s ghastly spite.

  Hamish disagreed adamantly. He had been prying, as was his wont, and although all his efforts had failed to win him a single word with Lisa, he was personally convinced that the Magnificent was going to do exactly what he said he would do— marry Lisa and remain in Florence. Prince Sartaq was not going to sneak out any back doors either. Nor were the priori. The truth was that all those men were just as much under Longdirk’s spell as the lowliest weaver. If comandante Longdirk was not worried, then neither were they. Toby had an astonishing air of permanence, an indestructibility that inspired absolute faith. The Fiend’s armies were closing in on the town—by nightfall they would have it in their grip—and Pietro Marradi was going to get married regardless.

  Hamish was not going to miss the wedding. This would be his last chance ever to speak to Lisa, probably his last chance ever to see her. The Fiend and all his horrors were not going to stop that.

  “You’d better catch some sleep,” he said. “You look as if you haven’t shut your eyes in days. You’re out on your feet.”

  Toby shrugged. “I’ll sleep some other year. Food and then duty—but if nothing goes horribly wrong, I’ll come to the wedding, I promise.”

  After they had eaten, they went their separate ways.

  Just before noon, the Fiend’s army came to Florence with bugles and drumbeats, dust and glitter, men and horses streaming down from the hills. Fiesole was burning, and the city gates had been closed. Another column of dust to the west showed where the army from Lucca was hastening up the Arno to join in the siege. The mood in the streets was one of shock and denial. No one had expected this, or not so soon. Even Hamish, who had been privy to all the intelligence reports, had trouble believing that it was really happening.

  When he went back to the inn to change, he found Toby there already, having another shave. If he opened his eyes wide he would bleed to death, but apparently he intended to keep his promise.

  What could be more reassuring to the citizens than seeing their betters whooping up a celebration and ignoring the nonsense outside the walls?

  Nothing provoked Italians to ostentation like a wedding. Weddings were political and had very little to do with love or procreation. A marriage was a treaty with an exchange of hostages, and the two families involved were honor-b
ound to squander money to insanity. In this case the bride’s family had no money at all, so the groom’s must spend enough for both. Thus it was that, while Nevil’s armies gathered like hyenas around Florence, inside the walls the inhabitants held carnival, gala, fiesta, and revelry. Bands played in the piazzas, floats displaying classical themes were dragged through the streets, wine flowed from fountains. The crowds outside the Marradi Palace were being regaled with free wine, food, and music—small wonder they cheered themselves hoarse when condottiere Longdirk arrived in his carriage. They would have cheered the Fiend himself.

  Within the grim-faced block, Hamish found a less exuberant mood. Oh, the bunting and decorations were breathtaking, the women’s gowns astounding, their jewels celestial, and the orchestra Elysian. No conceivable extravagance had been overlooked. Each guest on entering was presented with a medallion displaying the Marradi arms impaled with the lion rampant of England, all set in gems. Other rich gifts would undoubtedly be distributed several times during the course of the celebration, and the meal would include twenty or more courses, each with its own wine. A hundred artists had labored on grotesque conceits around the courtyard, heraldic animals and mythological beasts taller than a man.

  All the same, the attendance was small, perhaps forty, and most of the revelers were the innermost of the innermost circle, the Marradi family en masse. They knew that all was not well. They were going to deny it for a few hours, but they must know that the next party they attended might be hosted by the Fiend, who had gruesome ways of entertaining important captives. Their jollity had a brittle ring to it.

  Lisa? Hamish peered anxiously around the courtyard, but there was as yet no sign of the bride or her mother.

  The Magnificent welcomed each arriving guest with smiles and laughter, and for once he was dressed as a dandy in multicolored splendor. Give him his due, he did not look forty. That did not mean he looked young enough to marry Lisa. He greeted Toby as “comandante,” then smiled as if that had been a slip of the tongue. “We are especially overjoyed by your noble presence, for it confirms that you have already taken all the steps necessary to secure the safety of the city.”

  Toby’s Italian still made the natives wince, but it no longer reduced them to tears. “I left everyone enough work to keep them busy for an hour or two, Your Magnificence. You will excuse my rudeness if duty calls me away before the end of the festivities?”

  Sartaq was close to upstaging Marradi, garbed like a peacock and chattering in urgent Italian, hands swooping like summer swallows. His mustache had disappeared some weeks ago, so only his eyes and the color of his skin seemed in any way alien. Judging by the pride of lionesses around him, he was still making husbands nervous.

  And Lucrezia of course. She triumphed over her years and, in the absence of Lisa, was a clear first in the courtyard for beauty. Toby bowed low to kiss her fingers. She did not wait to acknowledge Hamish at his side before flashing her spite like a rapier.

  “Welcome, Sir Tobias. It is kind of you to put aside your personal sorrows and join our celebration.”

  Toby’s puzzled expression made him seem close to half-witted. “Sorrows, madonna? My only sorrow is that it is so long since I have had the pleasure of looking upon your glorious self.”

  The funny thing was that the great lummox genuinely thought he didn’t know how to handle women. Most of them fell on their knees as he went by, and he could knock the rest over with a smile.

  Lucrezia was not quite so easy, though. She smiled disbelievingly. “I confess that the lady still speaks of you often, but I’m sure she will grow out of that once she has a husband to comfort her.”

  Hamish quelled a murderous impulse. Toby just smiled blandly.

  “Not even a rightful-born queen could ask for a nobler husband than your magnificent brother, duchessa.” His eyes were innocent as owls’.

  A puzzled frown disturbed the baby smoothness of Lucrezia’s brow. “And you must just learn to live with a broken heart!”

  “You shattered it the first day we met, madonna.”

  Then it happened. A trumpet brayed. Sartaq, having left the courtyard unseen, made a grand return entrance, escorting Lisa and her mother. By cruel chance, the door they used was right where Lucrezia and the two mercenaries were standing and partially blocked by an enormous phoenix of fabric and paper. Lisa came around the beast and face-to-face with Hamish. She halted so suddenly that the prince stumbled and her mother almost ran into her.

  He dreamed of her every night and thought of her from dawn till dusk. He knew every eyelash, the two tiny moles by her lips, the little fleck of silver in her right eye, and yet in a month he had forgotten how beautiful she was. In her wedding gown she was unbelievably, epically gorgeous. The famous Marradi rubies burned at her throat like arterial blood.

  They stared at each other for an age, a blink, a thousand years, a trice.

  “Oh, madonna!” he said. “Will you topple the towers of Troy again?”

  “Master Campbell …” Then she was walking on with the prince and her mother, and the moment had ended.

  As Hamish returned to reality he realized that the Duchess of Ferrara was staring at him with a look that made his whole body cringe. “You?” she said, and the flames in her regard might be disbelief or incipient murder or both.

  Toby was laughing! “Of course him! You didn’t think she hankered after me, did you, monna? Great clumsy me?”

  No! Hamish thought. No, Toby! Whatever you do, don’t ever laugh at Lucrezia Marradi! Better to poke your finger in a lion’s eye.

  But the damage, whatever it might be, was already done.

  42

  Toby was seated between young Guilo Marradi and one of the token English guests, Sir John Whitemouth, who had been knighted on the field of Rioz by Lisa’s great-grandfather. He was certainly the deafest man north of Sicily, and his conversational skills were further restricted by a total lack of teeth. Hamish was at the far end of the long table, while Sartaq held place of honor in the center. The bridegroom had a chair at the ladies’ table, with his back to the men’s.

  Lisa in white shone with an ethereal beauty like pearls or moonlight, which was accentuated by the blood fire of her rubies. She was putting on a fine performance, chattering glibly with her neighbors—Marradi across the table, her mother and Lucrezia flanking her—as if she had been married a dozen times. Blanche looked as if she had died of some wasting sickness and found her smiles in the charnel house. Lucrezia kept staring at Toby and glancing away quickly every time he noticed, so he was certainly not back in her good books, if she had any.

  The two long, white-damasked tables were separated by a gap wide enough for the double line of servants who paraded in with every course. The meal began with wine, antipasto, and speeches. The first orations had been assigned to junior Marradis. Guilo went second and did a workmanlike job, invoking so many classical authorities to bless the union that Toby understood barely a word of it. Important people would speak later. An orchestra tuned up and began. He swallowed a yawn and an olive and turned to bellow something trivial in Whitemouth’s ancient ear.

  Course followed course, armies of footmen parading in to place a golden bowl in front of each diner simultaneously. Toby had met this conceit before at banquets and considered it needlessly embarrassing, because it forced everyone to eat roughly the same amount. With his appetite, he preferred the standard custom where each diner ladled out whatever he needed from a common dish onto a trencher of hard bread. Gold tableware made the food cold before it even arrived, and he could not wipe his fingers on it.

  Whitemouth passed him the goblet, a servant filled it with wine, he drained it, and passed the goblet on to Guilo. In a little while it came around again. Servants removed one course, offered washing water and towels for sticky hands, brought another. After the carp, each guest was presented with an enameled rose; after the capon, a silver inkstand bearing the entwined insignia of the bride and groom.

  Then a steward bro
ught in a splendid golden chalice inset with jewels and paraded it along each table in turn. The Magnificent filled it with wine and carried it across to the men’s table to present to the prince. Sartaq rose and drank while the company applauded.

  A few moments later Marradi performed the same ceremony with another goblet, this time giving it to his bride. After the roast swan, all the guests were presented with fur-trimmed cloaks. And so it went: food, wine, speeches, gifts, and music, followed by more food, wine, speeches, gifts, and music. Toby wondered how large a sack he would have to carry away with him and what he would do with the stuff.

  Tomorrow the war.

  The marriage was not forgotten. A nervous notary read out the betrothal agreement, and the couple acknowledged that they had confirmed their intentions before the tutelary in the sanctuary. An hour or so later the marriage contract was read and then signed, with the prince standing in for Lisa’s father. Toby was glad he could not see Hamish.

  Lucrezia was still lobbing calculating glares in his direction. He should not have laughed at her. Had her misapprehension been encouraged by Lisa? A girl who could tell her mother that Hamish was the son of an earl was capable of just about anything.

  He would really enjoy eight hours’ solid sleep. A tiled floor like this one would do.

  More toasts, more costly goblets.

  More food, wine, speeches, gifts.

  Sir John, who drank better than he could eat, launched into a long, damp dissertation on the evils of guns and how they had ruined warfare. His English was less intelligible than Guilo’s Italian.

  Then came a brief ceremony in which the groom placed a ring on Lisa’s finger. Oh, poor Hamish!

  “Is that the end?” Toby asked. “Are they married now?” He ought to be out on the battlements watching the disaster unfold, except that he had already done everything he possibly could.

  “Not quite,” Guilo said. “We see them to the chamber door. As soon it shuts, they’re considered married.”

 

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