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Authors: Judith Tarr

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“He’s damned near bled out,” Richard said. His face was red, one might think with fury, and his bright blue eyes were burning dry. “He’s cursed lucky the man who found him recognized that face of his and didn’t toss him in the pit with the infidels.”

“He’s luckier he wasn’t taken for dead,” she said. “Are you going to let me tend him or are you going to protect him until there’s no need of my services?”

Richard blinked rapidly. There was a bed, elaborate with silks and cushions. Sioned rid it of most of the silks and all of the cushions, and waited with little enough patience until Richard laid Mustafa in it. A basin was already waiting, and water meant for the king’s bath. She appropriated it and the two squires who looked after it, and sent one of them to fetch cloths and bandages. The other she kept to fend off the curious—of whom Richard was the most intrusive—and to lift where lifting was needed.

Mustafa was unconscious, which was well; he would have been appalled to lie naked under all their eyes. But she needed to see the whole of him, to count his wounds and then do what she could to mend them. He was green under the warm brown of his skin—bled out for a fact. He looked as if he had walked through a whirlwind of knives, with the odd arrow for variety.

“And yet,” she said to her brother, who was still there in spite of the half-dozen messengers hanging about with varying degrees of impatience, “none of it, in itself, is deadly, or even particularly serious. It’s the sheer number of them that flattened him.”

“I can see that,” Richard said. “Tell me what really matters. Is he going to die?”

“I hope not,” she said. It was not what he hoped to hear, but it was the best she could do.

“Make sure he lives,” Richard said with a hint of roughness. He did not touch the man on the bed, but his expression told Sioned as much as she needed to know.

It was nothing she had not known already. That her brother did not love women was clear to anyone with eyes. That the Saracen slave was bound heart and soul to the King of the English, the whole camp knew. It took very little wit to understand how matters were.

Richard, having confessed more than he might have wanted, finally answered her prayers and went to be king of a victorious
army. Sioned settled to the task of mending the battered body. Darkness fell while she was doing it—she barely noticed, except to call for lamps.

She poured a small cupful of clean water from the jar by the king’s bed and sprinkled in it a bit of powder from her store of medicines. She coaxed it into him drop by drop, murmuring as she did so, words that her mother had taught her.

The fall of night made the spirits stronger. They crowded beyond the light, drawn to the blood of battle, feeding on carnage.

A handful of them had the same scent that she caught in the blood of this man, such of it as was left. She cleansed the point of her little dagger in the flame of a lamp, and pricked her finger. Blood welled, rich and red. She sang a sweet winding song over it, a song that named and bound the spirits she had chosen, and lured them into the light.

They drifted like smoke, coiling about one another, murmuring in their eerie voices. They strained toward the promise of blood. As the first of them stooped to drink, her free hand darted out.

The spirit fluttered like a bird, chittering too shrilly for mortal ears to hear. She pressed it to Mustafa’s heart and sang the blood out of it, all that it had drunk on the battlefield. When it was empty, pallid and sad, she let it sip from her finger, but lightly—it would not feast here.

Three times she milked spirits of the blood they had taken, and three times she paid them with the blood of her own heart. Then she set them free. They would have lingered if she had let them: blood was a bond, and the blood that was in her was simmering with magic. It was sweetest of all, they sang, and most beautifully alluring.

She raised the wards to ban them. In stillness empty of spirits, she bent again over Mustafa. The green tinge had left his skin. He lay in healing sleep, his heart beating strongly, his wounds beginning already to mend.

She covered him with silk and sat on her heels with a sigh. This magic had not exhausted her, but she needed a little while
to recover. She caught herself wondering: did he suffer from the body’s weakness as she did, or were there arts and expedients to lessen it?

He
—the Saracen, whom her brother had defeated. He had been walking in her dreams since she saw him, two days ago now. No man had ever done that to her. She did not know if she liked it, but neither could she bring herself to resent it. If she could see him again, speak with him, learn a tiny fraction of what he knew, she would not be content, but she would rest a little more easily.

She thrust herself to her feet. There were still wounded to look after, and a long night ahead. She left Mustafa under guard, mending as he slept, and went back to Master Judah’s tent.

C
HAPTER
S
IX

T
he march from Arsuf to Jaffa was a canter in a meadow after the long hard road from Acre. There were Saracens, but they were less troublesome than the stinging flies. Saladin, defeated, had slunk off to lick his wounds.

He would come back; that was inevitable. For the moment Richard was content to strengthen the fortifications of Jaffa, while his army took its ease in the orchards and vineyards and the famous groves of oranges.

He usually had Mustafa with him, limping a little and bandaged here and there, but steady enough on his feet. Mustafa had seen the face of the angel of death; he had been within a breath’s span of Paradise. But when he woke from oblivion, it was to Richard’s big ruddy face and an all too mortal assortment of bodily discomforts.

He was weak then: he let himself throw arms about the king. The king had allowed it; he had even returned the embrace. Maybe something would have come of that, but someone came with a message, and that was the end of it.

Mustafa could not have said he was sorry. The king’s dog—
he could be that, and happily. The king’s lover was a chancier thing. He saw how the singer watched him, the ever-present and ever-watchful Blondel. There was one who would be quick with a dagger between the ribs, if the occasion presented itself. He did not mind a dog overmuch, but if Mustafa presumed to be more, Blondel would exact the price for it.

What the two of them did together in the nights, Mustafa did not know or want to know. After the first night in Arsuf, Mustafa went back to his usual place by the outer wall of the tent. A barricade of squires and a clerk or two divided him from the king; and that was as it should be.

 

The third day in Jaffa, Sioned faced the reckoning. She had hoped to delay it longer, expected to suffer it sooner. She had been changing a soldier’s bandages; the man’s sudden stillness told her who had come to stand behind her.

She let him stand there until she was done. When the deep sword cut was salved and wrapped in clean cotton, she washed her hands in the basin and dried them with a cloth, and turned to face her brother.

Richard was not scowling, which she took for a good sign. “Master Judah says you’re indispensable,” he said.

“I would hope so,” she said.

“He also says,” said Richard, “that you have the best hands and the clearest eye among the surgeons. Is he by any chance in love with you?”

“Have you by any chance met his wife?”

“His—” Richard glared at her. “Are you mocking me?”

“A little,” she said. “No, he is not in love with me. I’ve won my place by my merits, brother. Is that so difficult to imagine?”

“It’s damned inconvenient,” he said. “I can’t be nursemaiding you all over Syria.”

“Who said I needed nursemaiding?”

His face darkened from its usual sunburned red to a remarkable shade of crimson. “Are you contradicting me?”

“What do you think?” she shot back. “Would I agree with
you? Why do you care where I am, as long as I’m making myself useful?”

“God’s
feet
! This is a war we’re in. I’m no Saracen, to take the whole harem on the march with me.”

She forbore to point out that as far as she knew, none of the Saracens at Arsuf had had women in their tents. “Since when was I a harem? Half the men think I’m a boy. The other half wouldn’t dare lay a hand on me for fear of you. Face it, brother: I’m not going back to Acre.”

“You’ll go if I say you go.”

“Why? Just because I insist on staying?”

“You impudent little—”

“Sire.” Master Judah’s voice was soft and drumroll-deep.

Sioned was in no fear of Richard’s fist, and she was none too grateful for the rescue, either. Master Judah fixed the two of them with a grim dark eye. “Wage your war as you please,” he said, “but do please wage it elsewhere. This is a house of the sick, not a battlefield.”

Richard sucked in a breath. Sioned clapped a hand over his mouth. She had to reach high to do it. Astonishment held him rooted; his glare had a perilous edge of laughter.

“I’m staying,” Sioned said. “I’m indispensable, remember?”

He growled. For a moment she thought he might bite her hand, but he pried it loose instead. “You’ll stay,” he said, “but I give you to Master Judah’s care. You obey him in every respect, or I’ll send you packing. Do you understand?”

“Perfectly,” she said. “I keep on doing what I’ve been doing, and you stop pretending you can send me away. That’s fair enough.”

He showed her his teeth, but for once he was wise enough not to argue with her. When he had gone, she looked up into Judah’s face and blanched a little.

“So now I’m to be your keeper,” he said. The mildness of his tone was rather disturbing in combination with his bland expression and the lids lowered over his eyes.

“I’m perfectly capable of keeping myself,” she said. “It’s only my fool of a brother who insists that I’m still a toddling child.”

“Granted,” Judah said, “but do recall that if any harm comes to you, it will be on my head. Not that I care for myself, but Rebecca and the boys . . .”

She could hardly object to that particular burden of guilt, since she had brought it on herself. She bent her head, as difficult as that was, and said almost meekly, “I’ll be careful.”

“Do that,” he said.

 

The day after matters came to a head with Richard, Sioned found occasion to explore the herb garden that hid in a corner of the citadel. Whoever had planted and tended it had had a clear eye for the mingled beauty of leaf and flower, and a predilection for the rarer and more magical herbs of the east. Aloe she knew, and there was a myrrh tree in a pot, but she did not recognize the young tree that grew near the wall. The leaves were most unusual, like smooth green fans. “That’s ginkgo,” a voice said. “It comes from Ch’in. There’s great virtue in it.”

She looked up. She must have been asleep on her feet, not to sense his coming—and blind and deaf not to know he was in Jaffa. There had been a rumor of embassies and treaties; it should not be surprising that the sultan would send his brother once more, who had so many more arts and skills than were evident to the mortal eye.

That still did not explain what he was doing here, all alone, regarding her with a touch of bemusement. “It was you,” he said. “You were the prince of mages that I saw before Arsuf.”

“Such as I am,” she said. Her tongue had a mind of its own, and much greater self-possession than the rest of her was capable of, just then. “Did you think I would be raising armies out of the earth to fight you?”

“It did seem that if your king had you, he would use you.”

She blinked at that. “Yes, it would seem that way, wouldn’t it? But this is Richard. If he believes in magic at all, he’s the last man who would stoop to using it.”

“He doesn’t believe in it? And yet his family is notoriously gifted with it.”

“He says,” said Sioned, “that if God had meant him to be a magician, He would have made him one. And that’s the most attention he’ll give to the matter.”

The lord Saphadin laughed, quick and light, as if it had been startled out of him. “I see I have much to learn of the Franks,” he said.

“And I,” she said with beating heart, “have much to learn of magic.”

“Are you proposing a bargain?” he asked her.

She lifted a shoulder in a shrug. “An exchange, perhaps. Knowledge for knowledge.”

“That could be arranged,” he said. “But wouldn’t your king disapprove?”

“My brother may not believe in magic, but he does believe in diplomacy—and there will be councils in which he needs an interpreter he can trust. If I occupy myself in perfecting my Arabic, he’ll be more pleased than not.”

“He is your brother?”

“That surprises you?”

His brow arched. “On reflection, no. There is no physical resemblance, but beyond the physical . . . I do see it.”

“It’s the temper,” she said. “The black heart of Anjou.” She paused. “Unless of course that alarms you; then I’ll assure you that I’m as demure as a maiden ever should be.”

“Ah, no,” he said. “You needn’t strain the bonds of truth for me. Shall we agree to terms? I’ll teach you nothing that will endanger my people or the holy war; I’ll grant the same consideration to you, and ask to know nothing that will threaten the course of the Crusade.”

“That’s a fair bargain,” she said. “Does one seal it in blood?”

“The clasp of a hand will do,” he said.

She flushed, though she raged at herself for it. It appeared that he did not see. He took her hand and bowed over it. His touch made her tremble. She could feel the splendor of his magic; when she looked into his face, it dazzled her.

All too soon, but mercifully quickly, he let her go. “I have a distressing number of people waiting,” he said, “one of them a
king with a choleric temper. But when duty is done, I’ll send for you. Are you often here?”

“I’m usually in Master Judah’s tent,” she said, then added quickly, “The king’s physician.”

“I do know Master Judah,” Saphadin said. He bowed again in the graceful manner of the east and smiled; then he was gone.

She stood for a long while and simply breathed. One would think, she thought rather crossly, that a woman of her breeding, who had eluded any number of attempts to marry her off, would be more in control of herself than this. She was as silly as one of the maids.

That would have to pass. She had a bargain now with the sultan’s own driver of bargains. If she meant to keep it, she must have discipline—both to face him without collapsing in a fit of girlish stupidity and to learn what he had to teach. Magic was discipline. Her mother had taught her that. If she had no discipline, then her magic was no more than market tricks and foolish charlatanry.

 

He did not summon her that night, or the next morning, either. She steeled herself against disappointment. He had matters of great import to address—and if those were pursued on the hunt or in feasting at Richard’s table, then that was the way of embassies. Through frivolity and seemingly aimless carousing, enemies came to know each other. He would remember her when he could, which might be days.

She had no fear that it would be never. He was a man of his word: that much she was sure of. She had ample to occupy her; she could hardly sit with folded hands and wait upon his pleasure.

On the morning of the second day, she was fletching arrows in the sunlight outside her tent—an art she had learned when she was a child in Gwynedd, which sometimes proved useful here. The messenger wore the shape of a small bright bird, one of many that flittered among the branches of the orange grove; but this one wore a crown of fire and spoke to her in Arabic.
“Lady, if you would come, my lord will begin to keep his bargain.”

She suppressed the urge to leap up and run where the bird led. That would not set a proper precedent. She finished the row of feathers that gave the arrow its wings, and put her tools away, tidily, while the bird hovered, singing to itself. She had gambled and won: the creature would wait.

She considered putting on clothes that would be suitable for a royal audience, but that would put her in too much of a flutter. He of all people would be accustomed to the sight of a woman in Turkish trousers with a veil over her hair, though she had no intention of covering her face as Muslim women did. If that caused him to reckon her wanton, then so be it.

 

The bird led her through the orchards and past a vineyard stripped of its grapes. There was a house beyond the vineyard, small but well kept, with a neat kitchen garden—miraculously untouched by the marauding armies—and an arbor of roses. It had a wall, but it seemed more fit to keep cattle away from the roses than to keep soldiers from attacking the house.

As she drew closer, she began to understand how it could stand intact where the Frankish armies had been and gone. The light was subtly different there, the air imperceptibly altered. If this house had been here even as early as this morning, she would have been amazed.

The bird delivered her to the rose arbor, loosed a trill of pure breathtaking sound, and vanished in a blur of jeweled light. For a long while there was no response. The house was still; no one stirred inside it. She debated going in to be certain, but the air was soft and the scent of roses ineffably sweet. She sat under the arbor and let herself simply be.

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