For Love of Evil (10 page)

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Authors: Piers Anthony

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy fiction

BOOK: For Love of Evil
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"Only the whole truth, Pabiola."

 

"But I-"

 

"I see nothing in this document about your torture."

 

Father Service started, but remained silent. This line of questioning had caught him by surprise, but it interested him.

 

The girl tried to shrink into herself. "I have not been-" She could not continue, for obviously she had been threatened with more torture if she told of the first.

 

"She's marked on the belly," Jolie said.

 

"Remove your tunic," Parry said.

 

Now Father Service had to protest. "We are men of God, Brother! We cannot expose this woman to-"

 

"True," Parry agreed. "We must clear this chamber of all but the essential parties." He glanced around to where guards and servitors stood. "Depart, we shall call when we require your presence."

 

"But Father!" the sergeant said.

 

Parry simply turned his gaze on the man, making a slight frown. The sergeant quailed, knowing the trouble he would be in if one of the friars reported him for insubordination. The power of the Church was supposedly neither physical nor political, but in truth it was both, and all knew it. Peasants were not the only folk subject to torture.

 

In short order the chamber was emptied of all but the two friars and the girl. "Remove your tunic," Parry repeated softly.

 

"Oh, Father, why do you seek to shame me?" she cried.

 

"We are men of God," Father Service said sharply. "There is no lechery in our gaze. We seek only to ascertain the truth." He had enough experience with Parry to know that Parry never made foolish demands, and of course he had to support the authority of the Church. This had become an issue; therefore he defended it.

 

Trembling, the girl drew off her tunic. She wore only a bandage beneath it, stained cloth wrapped around her abdomen. Her body was so thin and dirty that it was no incitement to lechery. "A knife, I think," Jolie said. "But she wasn't cut deeply; there must be something else."

 

"You said you have not been tortured," Parry said. "Why, then, do you wear a bandage?"

 

"Oh, Father, the demon did it to me!" she exclaimed.

 

"Did what?" Father Service asked, getting into it now.

 

"He-it-it clawed me when it-"

 

"Woman!" Parry snapped, causing her to jump guiltily. . "Do not attempt to deceive men of God!"

 

She broke into tears.

 

"Fabiola, look at me," Parry said.

 

The girl wrenched her gaze up until it met his own. She seemed like a bird before a serpent.

 

"There are two kinds of damnation," Parry said. "One is the damnation of the body, and I see you have suffered that. The other is the damnation of the soul, and you are in danger of that."

 

"Oh, please. Father, mercy!" she screamed, terrified anew.

 

"The Lord Jesus is merciful," Parry said sternly. "But He requires truth. Tell the truth now, and your soul shall be removed from peril."

 

The girl sobbed, but did not speak.

 

"There is something else," Jolie said. "I think she's been threatened. Or maybe her family."

 

Parry nodded. "Do you fear to bring destruction on your family if you tell the truth?" he asked quietly. "Remember, God is your judge."

 

Her mouth worked. "I-"

 

"I give you my word that no harm-no further harm shall come to you or your family if you confess the whole truth before us now," Parry said.

 

A tiny flicker of hope showed. "Your word. Father?"

 

"And mine," Father Service said. "You have nothing to fear from us."

 

Still she hesitated. "You swear?"

 

Father Service stiffened, but Parry cautioned him with a touch on the arm. "Lucifer can be cruel to the ignorant. Brother," he murmured. "She is not conscious of questioning our word." Then, to the girl:"We swear, before God and the Holy Virgin, child. You and your family will be protected. All it requires is the whole truth." Even that did not seem to be enough. The girl stood there, obviously wanting to cooperate, but unable to take the necessary step.

 

"You know we are not alone in this," Parry said. "Look at me, child." He brought out a small silver cross.

 

She looked, and he fixed her with his mesmeric gaze. "In a moment you will see this cross begin to glow. It will be a sign from God to you personally, that all will be well. Look at the cross now, child."

 

She transferred her gaze to the cross. In a moment her face seemed to illuminate. She was highly suggestible, as the ignorant tended to be. "Oh, it glows, it glows!" she exclaimed.

 

Parry extended the cross toward her. "Take it, child. Feel the warmth of it. This is God's protection, as long as your faith is strong."

 

Hesitantly she took it. "Oh, it is warm!"

 

"As warm as our Savior's great and blessed love for you," Parry said. "He will protect you always, if your sins be confessed and your heart puce."

 

"But I am full of sin!" she cried. "Terrible sin!"

 

"Confess that sin, that it may be freely forgiven. Our Lord Jesus died, that this be possible. He welcomes the penitent sinner."

 

Then the floodgate was opened. "They made me do it!" she said rapidly. "They stripped me and put the knife to my belly, and they cut me, and it hurt but I could not scream because they bound my mouth, and they said they would cut a hole in me and draw out my gut and tie a horse to it and strike him with a whip so that he would gallop away and draw out my life and they brought up the horse and oh, I had to do it!"

 

Father Service's mouth fell open. But Parry, prepared for this, took it in stride. "We understand, child. Put your clothing on again, and we shall discuss the details. You have done well to tell us this."

 

Fabiola scrambled into her tunic, and the interrogation resumed. They learned that Lord Bofort, the accuser, had done this, threatening to do the same to each member of her family if she failed to testify as he wished, and if she spoke one word of this to any other party. Lord Bofort was the nemesis of this region; she knew he could and would do all of it. There were stories.

 

"But I have not been raped," she had protested as she learned the story she had to tell.

 

Whereupon one of Bofort's men had raped her. She, seeing the knife and the horse nearby, had not dared protest. Therefore she knew that by contemporary custom she had not truly been raped, for she had technically acceded to it. But she would be sure to tell the story they demanded of her. Parry turned to his associate. "Are you satisfied. Brother?"

 

"No," Father Service said. "Justice has not yet been done." Parry nodded. -"And it had better be initiated before this girl leaves this chamber." He raised his voice. "Magistrate!" The magistrate entered. "The girl has satisfied you?"

 

"In a manner of speaking," Parry said dryly. "We are satisfied that we now know the truth of this situation. You will arrest Lord Bofort, for he has incited false testimony. You will also extend protection to this witness and her family, lest there be misfortune."

 

"But I do not take orders from you!" the magistrate protested.

 

Parry turned that disconcerting gaze on the man. "Of course you do not, magistrate. You merely do what you know to be proper. We merely advise. The Church does not interfere in the concerns of men." The man became as uncertain as the girl had been. "You really think-?"

 

"We believe that the truth will manifest in due course, and would not want it to be said that any party interfered." Parry continued to gaze at the man.

 

"Uh, yes, perhaps it would be best to-I will see to it."

 

He hurried out.

 

Father Service shook his head, bemused. "Brother, you certainly have a way with you! First you caused the girl to reverse her sworn testimony, then you-I could not have done it!"

 

Parry smiled. "Surely you could. Brother, if you saw the need." He was fortunate that his associate could so readily be managed. That was a common trait of those whose views of right and wrong were narrow.

 

But it turned out that Lord Bofort was not so readily arrested. He resided in a castle that was defended by a host of a score or more of knights. It would take an army with siege equipment to fetch him out-and by the time that could be arranged, his potent political connections would have gotten him off.

 

Parry realized that his promise to Pabiola would be worthless unless he got Lord Bofort out of the way. The moment the friars departed, those knights would swoop down and wreak vengeance on the girl and her family. The magistrate would bend to the most proximate power, and not interfere. Parry had kept the girl in the vicinity, knowing that it would not be safe to release her until the matter was resolved. She was looking better, having been fed and cleaned, and her confidence in the cross he had given her almost made her glow. That glow would quickly fade if Bofort got hold of her!

 

However, he had come prepared for this kind of encounter, thanks to Jolie's suspicion about this assignment. "I shall simply have to go and fetch him out," he told the magistrate, "and deliver him to you for trial."

 

Father Service coughed. He was firm in his faith, but not a fool.

 

The magistrate shook his head. "Begging your pardon. Father, but you can't do that. He has little respect for friars. He would have you beaten, or worse."

 

Parry affected surprise. "But I am a man of God."

 

"Father, we are far from the center of things. The power of God sometimes has trouble making itself felt here," the magistrate said.

 

"The power of God is without limit," Parry said righteously.

 

"All the same. Father-"

 

"Perhaps we should merely report this to-" Father Service began.

 

"No, this is a thing that must be done," Parry said firmly. "But I agree. Brother, it should be reported. Suppose you return to make the report to our Order, while I go to bring the man to justice?"

 

"You must not go alone!" Father Service said, agitated.

 

"I will not go alone," Parry said. "I will go in the company of God, than which there is none better."

 

"Yes, of course! But even so-"

 

"Then it is settled. I will see Lord Bofort to justice here, while you relay word to our Order, who will advise the Pope, who I am sure will be pleased. It is not every day the Church is able to act so specifically in the cause of justice."

 

"Not every day," Father Service agreed hollowly.

 

"Really, Father-" the magistrate started.

 

"No more of this," Parry said briskly. "My course is clear. Merely show me the way to Lord Bofort's demesnes, and I shall pursue the matter as God directs me."

 

"I can show you, Father!" Fabiola said. "I live near there." Which might have been the main reason she was selected as a key witness. Why travel far to induct a peasant girl when one was close by?

 

"Excellent, child; you shall be my guide." Father Service exchanged a look with the magistrate. Both evidently thought Parry had lost his wits, but neither was in a position to make an issue of it. They thought he was going naked into the lion's den.

 

However, he reminded himself, there had been one who had gone into the lion's den before, and had tamed the lions.

 

In due course they set off, the girl leading the way, the man riding the donkey. There had been one who rode a donkey into town, too, he remembered.

 

And, gazing at Pabiola's thin back, he was reminded again of Jolie, as she had been during their first interview.

 

That thought evoked Jolie. "Now don't go getting notions!" she chided him.

 

"None, my love," he murmured.

 

Fabiola turned. "What, Father?"

 

"It is all right, child. I was merely talking to myself."

 

But the girl continued to gaze in his direction. "Who is that great lady. Father?"

 

"You see her?" Parry asked, startled. "Of course she sees me!" Jolie said. "You gave her the cross."

 

"So I did," he agreed, doubting that that could be the reason. Father Service had a similar cross and had not seen Jolie. Then, to Fabiola: "The lady is my wife, when she was your age. She has been dead more than twenty years, but she guards me yet."

 

"Oh." Fabiola faced forward again and resumed walking.

 

"What do you have in mind, love?" Jolie inquired. "You know that evil man is not going to come out just because you ask him to."

 

"I know. But if he is, as we strongly suspect, the sorcerer who spotted us, and led to your death and my father's, he cannot withstand exposure. That may be my major weapon against him."

 

Fabiola turned again. "Lord Bofort is a sorcerer. Father?"

 

He had forgotten, carelessly, that the girl could overhear him when he spoke to Jolie. Yet was there harm in it? Fabiola was dependent on him for her security and that of her family; she would support him absolutely.

 

"Yes, child, I believe so. So am I-but my magic is white, in support of God, while his is black, supported by the forces of evil." Parry had made a considerable study of evil; on occasion other friars had even teased him for his supposed love of evil because of his finesse in ferreting it out, as in this present case. He had learned well that evil was not always where one expected it, or of the nature one anticipated.

 

"I would like to see the man who was responsible for denying me my life with you brought to justice," Jolie said. "But still, I don't see why mere exposure should hurt him."

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