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"Two weeks."
"No," Stern said. "We can't do that. We have to go for it."
"That's right," Gordon said. "We do."
02:55:14.
Marek and Johnston climbed the circular stairs. At the top, they met de Kere, who was looking smugly satisfied. They stood once more on the wide battlements of La Roque. Oliver was there, pacing, red-faced and angry.
"Do you smell it?" he cried, pointing off toward the field, where Arnaut's troops continued to ma.s.s.
It was now early evening; the sun was down, and Marek guessed it must be about six o'clock. But in the fading light, they saw that Arnaut's forces now had a full dozen trebuchets a.s.sembled and set out in staggered rows on the field below. After the example of the first incendiary arrow, they had moved their engines farther apart, so that any fire would not spread beyond one engine.
Beyond the trebuchets, there was a staging area, with troops huddled around smoking fires. And at the very rear, the hundreds of tents of the soldiers nestled back against the dark line of the forest.
It looked, Marek thought, perfectly ordinary. The start of a siege. He couldn't imagine what Oliver was upset about.
A distinct burning odor drifted toward them from the smoking fires. It reminded Marek of the smell that roofers made. And with good reason: it was the same substance. "I do, my Lord," Johnston said. "It is pitch."
Johnston's blank expression conveyed that he, too, did not know why Oliver was so upset. It was standard practice in siege warfare to lob burning pitch over the castle walls.
"Yes, yes," Oliver said, "it is pitch. Of course it is pitch. But that is not all all. Do you not smell it? They are mixing something mixing something with the pitch." with the pitch."
Marek sniffed the air, thinking Oliver was almost certainly right. When burning, pure pitch had a tendency to go out. Thus pitch was usually combined with other substances-oil, tow or sulfur-to make a more robustly burning mixture.
"Yes, my Lord," Johnston said. "I smell it."
"And what is it?" Oliver said in an accusing tone.
"Ceraunia,I believe."
"Also called the 'thunderbolt stone'?"
"Yes, my Lord."
"And do we also employ this thunderbolt stone?"
"No, my Lord-" Johnston began.
"Ah! I thought as much."
Oliver was now nodding to de Kere, as if their suspicions were confirmed. Clearly, de Kere was behind all this.
"My Lord," Johnston said, "we have no need of the thunderbolt stone. We have better stone. We use pure sulfure sulfure."
"But sulfure sulfure is not the same." Another glance at de Kere. is not the same." Another glance at de Kere.
"My Lord, it is. The thunderbolt stone is pyrite kerdonienne pyrite kerdonienne. When ground fine, it makes sulfure sulfure."
Oliver snorted. He paced. He glowered.
"And how," he said finally, "does Arnaut come to have this thunderbolt stone?"
"I cannot say," Johnston said, "but the thunderbolt stone is well known to soldiers. It is even mentioned in Pliny."
"You evade me with tricks, Magister. I speak not of Pliny. I speak of Arnaut. The man is an illiterate pig. He knows nothing of ceraunia ceraunia, or the thunderbolt stone."
"My Lord-"
"Unless he is aided," Oliver said darkly. "Where are your a.s.sistants now?" Oliver said darkly. "Where are your a.s.sistants now?"
"My a.s.sistants?"
"Come, come, Magister, evade me no further."
"One is here," Johnston said, gesturing to Marek. "I am given that the second is dead, and I have no word of the third."
"And I believe," Oliver said, "that you know very well where they are. They are both working in the camp of Arnaut, even as we speak. That is how he comes to possess this arcane stone."
Marek listened to this with a growing sense of unease. Oliver had never seemed mentally stable, even in better times. Now, faced with impending attack, he was becoming openly paranoid-goaded by de Kere. Oliver seemed unpredictable, and dangerous.
"My Lord-" Johnston began.
"And further, I believe what I suspected from the first! You are the creature of Arnaut, for you have pa.s.sed three days in Sainte-Mere, and the Abbot is the creature of Arnaut."
"My Lord, if you will hear-"
"I will not! You shall hear. I believe you work against me, that you, or your a.s.sistants, know the secret entrance to my castle, despite all your protestations, and that you plan to escape at the earliest moment-perhaps even tonight, under cover of Arnaut's attack." shall hear. I believe you work against me, that you, or your a.s.sistants, know the secret entrance to my castle, despite all your protestations, and that you plan to escape at the earliest moment-perhaps even tonight, under cover of Arnaut's attack."
Marek was carefully expressionless. That was, of course, exactly what they intended, if Kate ever found the entrance to the pa.s.sage.
"Aha!" Oliver said, pointing at Marek. "You see? His jaw clenches. He knows what I say is true."
Marek started to speak, but Johnston put a restraining hand on his arm. The Professor said nothing himself, just shook his head.
"What? Will you stop his confession?"
"No, my Lord, for your surmises are not true."
Oliver glowered, paced. "Then bring me the weapons I bade you make earlier."
"My Lord, they are not ready."
"Ha!" Another nod to de Kere.
"My Lord, the grinding of the powder takes many hours."
"In many hours, it will be too late."
"My Lord, it will be in good time."
"You lie, you lie, you lie lie!" Oliver spun, stamped his foot, stared off at the siege engines. "Look to the plain. See how they make ready. Now answer me, Magister. Where is he? Where is he?"
There was a pause. "Where is who, my Lord?"
"Arnaut! Where is Arnaut? Where is Arnaut? His troops ma.s.s for attack. He always leads them. But now he is not there. Where is he?" His troops ma.s.s for attack. He always leads them. But now he is not there. Where is he?"
"My Lord, I cannot say...."
"The witch of Eltham is there-see her, standing by the engines? You see? She watches us. The d.a.m.nable woman."
Marek turned quickly to look. Claire was indeed down among the soldiers, walking with Sir Daniel at her side. Marek felt his heart beat faster, just to see her, though he was not sure why she would walk so near the siege lines. She was looking up at the walls. And suddenly she stopped abruptly. And he thought, with a kind of certainty, that she had seen him. He had an almost irresistible impulse to wave, but of course he did not. Not with Oliver snorting and puffing beside him. But he thought, I'm going to miss her when I go back.
"The Lady Claire," Oliver growled, "is a spy of Arnaut and was so from the beginning. She let his men into Castelgard. All arranged, no doubt, with that scheming Abbot. But where is the villain himself? Where is the pig Arnaut? Nowhere to be seen."
There was an awkward silence. Oliver smiled grimly.
"My Lord," Johnston began, "I understand your concer-"
"You do not!" He stamped his foot and glared at them. Then, "Both of you. Come with me."
The surface of the water was black and oily, and even looking down from thirty feet above, it stank. They were standing beside a circular pit, located deep in the bowels of the castle. All around them, the walls were dark and damp, barely illuminated by flickering torches.
At Oliver's signal, a soldier beside the pit started to crank an iron winch. Clattering, a thick chain began to rise from the depths of the water.
"They call this Milady's Bath," Oliver said. "It was made by Francois le Gros, who had a taste for these things. They say Henri de Renaud was kept here for ten years before he died. They threw live rats down to him, which he killed and ate raw. For ten years."
The water rippled, and a heavy metal cage broke the surface and began to rise, dripping, into the air. The bars were black and filthy. The stench was overpowering.
Watching it rise, Oliver said, "In Castelgard I promised you, Magister, that if you deceived me, I would kill you. You shall bathe in Milady's Bath."
He looked at them intently, his eyes wild.
"Confess now."
"My Lord, there is nothing to confess."
"Then you have nothing to fear. But hear this, Magister. If I discover that you, or your a.s.sistants, know the entrance to this castle, I shall lock you away in this place, from which you will never escape, never in your life, and I will leave you here, in darkness, to starve and rot forever."
Holding a torch in the corner, Robert de Kere allowed himself a smile.
02:22:13.
The steps led steeply downward, into darkness. Kate went first, holding the torch. Chris followed. They went through a narrow pa.s.sage, almost a tunnel, that seemed to be manmade, and then came out into a much larger chamber. This was a natural cave. Somewhere high up and off to the left, they saw the pale glimmer of natural light; there had to be a cave entrance up there.
The ground before them still sloped down. Ahead, she saw a large pool of black water and heard the rush of a river. The interior smelled strongly of a sweet-sour odor, like urine. She scrambled over the boulders until she reached the black pool. There was a little sandy margin around the edge of the water.
And in the sand, she saw a footprint.
Several footprints.
"Not recent," Chris said.
"Where's the path?" she said. Her voice echoed. Then she saw it, off to the left, a protruding section of rock wall that had been artificially cut back, making an indentation that allowed you to skirt around the pool and to pa.s.s by.
She started forward.
Caves didn't bother her. She'd been in several in Colorado and New Mexico with her rock-climbing friends. Kate followed the path, seeing footprints here and there, and pale streaks in the rock that might have been scratches from weapons.
"You know," she said, "this cave can't be all that long if people used it to carry water to the castle during a siege."
"But they didn't," Chris said. "The castle has another supply of water. They would have been bringing food, or other supplies."
"Even so. How far could they go?"
"In the fourteenth century," Chris said, "peasants didn't think anything about walking twenty miles a day, and sometimes more. Even pilgrims walked twelve or fifteen miles in a day, and those groups included women and old people."
"Oh," she said.
"This pa.s.sage could be ten miles," he said. And then he added, "But I hope it's not."
Once past the protruding rock, they saw a cut pa.s.sage leading away from the dark lake. The pa.s.sage was about five feet high and three feet wide. But at the edge of the dark pool, a wooden boat was tied up. A small boat, like a rowboat. It thunked softly against the rocks.
Kate turned. "What do you think? Walk, or take the boat?"
"Take the boat," Chris said.
They climbed in. There were oars. She held the torch and he rowed, and they moved surprisingly fast, because there was a current. They were on the underground river.
Kate was worried about the time. She guessed they might have only two hours left. That meant they had to get to the castle, reunite with the Professor and Marek, and get themselves into an open s.p.a.ce so they could call the machine-all within two hours.
She was glad for the current, for the speed with which they glided deeper into the cavern. The torch in her hand hissed and crackled. Then they heard a rustling sound, like papers ruffled in the wind. The sound grew louder. They heard a squeaking, like mice.
It was coming from somewhere deeper in the cave.
She looked at Chris questioningly.
"It's evening," Chris said, and then she began to see them-just a few at first, and then a hazy cloud, then a torrent of bats flying out of the cave, a brown river in the air above their boat. She felt a breeze from hundreds of flapping wings.
The bats continued for several minutes, and then it was silent again, except for the crackle of the torch.
They glided onward, down the dark river.