Ash: A Secret History (28 page)

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Authors: Mary Gentle

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BOOK: Ash: A Secret History
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What I have touched – touched, Anna! – is exactly what the ASH texts describe as the Visigoth clay walkers.

They are *real*.

I have to get off this machine, Isobel urgently needs to use it. I’ll contact you again as soon as I can. The translations of the documents in section three are in the file I’m sending with this. Don’t ditch my book!!! We might have something here that’s bigger than anyone ever thought.

*What* Visigoths? HA!

– Pierce

  Message: #28 (Pierce Ratcliff)

Subject: Ash, media-related projects

Date:    07/11/00 at 06.17 p.m.

From:    Longman@

Pierce –

I want you to talk to Dr Napier-Grant, and persuade her that you two should work together, starting NOW. My MD Jonathan Stanley is *very* much in favour of the idea of doing some kind of a tie-in between yourself and Doctor Napier-Grant. She sounds like one of those great British eccentrics who come across brilliantly on the small screen. I can see a possible, tv series for her, and there’s your original translation of ‘Ash’; and then there is what you could do together – a book-of-the-expedition? Do you think you could write a script for a documentary on the expedition? This has *terrific* possibilities!

I’m certain a deal could be arranged. I don’t usually say this to my academic authors, but *get yourself an agent*! You need one who handles film and tv rights, as well as non-fiction book translation rights.

It’s true we’ve still got a text that’s half mediaeval legend, half historical fact (eclipses!) – and I’m gobsmacked that something like an invasion could be left out of the history books – and how DID these golems MOVE? – but I don’t see any of this as a barrier to successful publication. Talk to Dr Napier-Grant about the idea for a joint project and get back to me as soon as you can!

Love, Anna

PART THREE

22 July–10 August AD 1476


How a Man Schall be Armyd at His Ease

1

 

I

Forty pitch-torches flared in the wind, under an ink-black daytime sky.

A great lane of people opened in front of Ash as she galloped into the centre of the camp outside Cologne. She halted astride Godluc, in full armour, the company banner cracking in the wind above her; the noise loud in the silence. Yellow light blazed across her strained white face. “Geraint! Euen! Thomas!”

Her lance-leader lieutenants ran to stand either side, ready to repeat her words the instant that she spoke, feed them out to the hundreds of her archers and billmen and knights gathering in front of her. Voices began shouting, chaotic in the unnatural dark.

“Listen to
me.
There is,” Ash spoke perfectly steadily, “
nothing
for you to be afraid of.”

Above, what should have been a July midday blue sky showed only black, empty darkness.

There is no sun.


I’m
here.
Godfrey’s
here, and he’s a priest. You’re not damned and you’re not in danger – if we were, I’d be the first one out of here!”

No response from any of the hundreds of fearful faces. The torchlight wavers across their shining silver helmets, loses itself in darkness between their crowded, armed bodies.

“Maybe we’re going to be like the lands Under the Penance now,” Ash continued, “—but – Angelotti’s
been
to Carthage, and the Eternal Twilight, and they manage well enough, and you’re not going to let a bunch of shabby rag-heads outdo the Lion!”

Nothing like a cheer, but they made the first responsive noise she’d heard out of them: a subdued mutter, full of
fuck!
and
shit!
and nobody quite saying the word
desertion.

“Right,” she said briskly. “We’re moving. The company’s going to strike camp. We’ve done a night dismount before, you all know how to do this. I want us loaded and ready to go at Vespers.”
2

A hand went up, just visible in the streaming sooty light of the makeshift torches. Ash leaned forward in the saddle, peering. She realised it was her steward Henri Brant, his body still banded with bloodstained cloths, leaning on the shoulder of her page Rickard. “Henri?”

“Why are we moving? Where are we going?” His voice sounded so weak, the young black-haired boy beside him shouted his questions up to Ash.

“I’ll tell you,” Ash said grimly. She sat back in her saddle, surveying the mass of people, keenly watching for those slipping away, those already carrying their packs, those familiar faces she couldn’t see present.

“You all know my husband. Fernando del Guiz. Well, he’s gone over to the enemy.”

“Is that
true?
” one of the men-at-arms yelled.

Ash, remembering Constanza, rescued from the tourney field’s riot; the tiny woman’s absolute distress; her unwillingness to confess to Fernando’s peasant wife that the court nobility knew exactly where her son was – remembering this, she pitched her voice to carry further into the dark day:

“Yes, it’s true.”

Over noise, she continued: “For whatever reason, it seems that Fernando del Guiz has sworn fealty to the Visigoth Caliph.”

She let them take it in, then said measuredly, “His estates are south of here, in Bavaria, at a place called Guizburg. I’m told Fernando’s occupying the castle there. Well – they’re not his estates. The Emperor’s put him under attainder. But they’re still
my
estates.
Ours.
And that’s where we’re going. We’re going to go south, take what’s ours,
and then we’ll face this darkness when we’re safe behind our own castle walls!

The next ten minutes was all shouted arguments, questions, a few ongoing personal quarrels dragged into the discussion, and Ash bellowing at the highest, most carrying pitch of her voice; ramrodding her authority home.

Robert Anselm leaned from his saddle and murmured in her ear. “Christ, girl! If we move this camp, we’ll have everybody all
over
the place.”

“It’ll be chaos,” she agreed hoarsely. “But it’s this or they panic, run off as refugees, and we’re not a company any more. Fernando’s neither here nor there – I’m giving them something we can
do.
Something –
anything.
It really doesn’t matter what it is!”

The void above
pulls,
sucks at her. The darkness doesn’t fade, doesn’t give way to dusk or twilight or dawn; hour upon hour upon hour is going by.

“Doing anything,” Ash said, “is better than doing nothing. Even if this
is
the end of the world… I’m keeping my people together.”

 

II

The striking of the Guizburg town clock reached Ash over the intermittent sound of cannon. Four bell-chimes. Four hours after what would have been midday.

“It’s not an eclipse.” Antonio Angelotti, where he sat at the end of the trestle table, observed without raising his head: “There’s no eclipse due. In any case, madonna, an eclipse lasts hours at most. Not twelve days.”

Sheets of ephemerides and his own calculations lay in front of him. Ash put her elbow on Angelotti’s table and rested her chin on her hand. Inside this room, boards creaked as Godfrey Maximillian paced up and down. Candlelight shifted. She looked at the shattered frames of the small windows, wishing for lightening air, for the damp cold of dawn, the interminable singing of birds, above all for the sense of freshness, of beginning, that sunrise has outdoors. Nothing. Nothing but darkness.

Joscelyn van Mander put his head around the door of the room, between the guards. “Captain, they won’t hear our herald, and they’re still shooting at us! The garrison doesn’t even admit your husband’s inside the keep.”

Antonio Angelotti leaned back in his chair. “They’ve heard the proverb, madonna – ‘a castle which speaks, and a woman who listens; both will be taken in the end’.”

“They’re flying his livery and a Visigoth standard – he’s here,” Ash observed. “Send a herald every hour. Keep shooting back! Joscelyn, let’s get inside there
fast.

As van Mander left, she added, “We’re still better off here – as long as we’re containing del Guiz, who’s a traitor, the Emperor’s happy; and we get a chance to stay out of the way and see how hot this Visigoth army really is…”

She got up and strode to the window. Cannon fire had exposed the lath and plaster of the wall by the sill, but it would be easy to patch up, she thought, touching the raw dry material. “Angeli, could your eclipse calculations be wrong?”

“No, because nothing that happened accords with the descriptions.” Angelotti scratched at the gathered neck of his shirt. Plainly, he had forgotten the ink stone and the sharpened quill: ink liberally dotted his white linen. He looked at his stained fingers in annoyance. “No penumbra, no gradual eating-away of the disc of the sun, no uneasiness of the beasts of the field. Just instant, icy lightlessness.”

He had bone-framed single-rivet spectacles clamped to his nose for reading. As he squinted through the lenses, in the candlelight, Ash noted the lines at the corners of his eyes, the squinching of flesh between his brows. This is how that face will look in ten years, she thought, when the skin is no longer taut, and the shine is off his gold hair.

He finished, “And Jan tells me the horses weren’t bothered beforehand.”

Robert Anselm, clumping up stairs and entering the room on the tail of this remark, pulled off his hood and said, “The sun darkened – weakened – once when I was in Italy. We must have had four hours’ warning from the horse lines.”

Ash spread her hands. “If no eclipse, then what?”

“The heavens are out of order…” Godfrey Maximillian did not stop pacing. There was a book in his hands, illuminated in red and blue; Ash might have made the text out with enough time to spell it letter by letter. He paused by one of the candles and flicked from page to page with a rapidity that both impressed her and filled her with contempt for a man who had no better use for his time than to learn to read. He did not even read aloud. He read quickly, and silently.

“So? Edward Earl of March saw
three
suns on the morning of the field of Mortimer’s Cross. For the Trinity.” Robert Anselm hesitated, as ever, mentioning the current English Yorkist king; then muttered aggressively, “Everyone knows the south exists in an eternal twilight, this is nothing to get worked up about. We’ve got a war to fight!”

Angelotti took off his spectacles. The white bone frames left a red dint across the bridge of his nose. “I can take down the keep walls here in half a day.” On the word
day,
his voice lost impetus.

Ash leaned out of the broken window frame. The town outside was mostly invisible in darkness. She sensed a kind of straining in the air, in the odd warm dusk – cooling, now, perhaps – that wanted to be afternoon. The Drown beams and pale plaster of the house’s façade were dappled with red, reflections from the huge bonfires burning in the market square below. Lanterns shone at every occupied window. She did not look up at the crown of the sky, where no sun shone, only a deep impenetrable blackness.

She looked up at the keep.

Bonfire-light illuminated only the bottom of the sheer walls, shadows flickering on flints and masonry. Slot-windows were eyelets of darkness. The keep rose into darkness above the town, from steep bare slopes of rock; and the road to the gate ran along one wall, from which the defenders had already shot and dropped more killing objects than she thought they had. A slab-sided building like a block of stone.

That’s where he is. In some room behind those walls.

She can envisage the round arches, the wooden floors crammed with bedrolls of men-at-arms, the knights up in the solar on the fourth floor; Fernando perhaps in the great hall, with his dogs and his merchant friends and his handguns…

No more than a furlong from where I am now. He could be looking at me.

Why?
Why have you done this? What
is
the truth of it?

Ash said, “I don’t want the castle damaged so much that we can’t defend it when
we’re
in there.”

All the armed men she could see in the streets near the keep wore livery jackets with the pewter Lion badge fastened to the shoulder; most of those company people who went unarmed – women selling goods, whores, children – had taken up some kind of strips of blue cloth sewn to their garments. Of the town’s citizens, she could see nothing, but she could hear them singing mass in the churches. The clock struck the quarter on the far side of this market square.

She longed for light with a physical desire, like thirst.

“I thought it might end with dawn,” she said. “
A
dawn. Any dawn. It still might.”

Angelotti stirred his sheets of calculations, scribbled over with the signs of Mercury, Mars; estimations of ballistics. “This is
new.

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