The Saracen: The Holy War - BestLightNovel.com
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_What will they do to me if I don't obey him? Will they burn me for being a Jew?_
And there was the other Tartar, Philip, standing beside the French churchman. He looked like John--round head, brown skin, slitted eyes--except that his beard and mustache were black. He was carrying a bow in one hand and had a quiver full of arrows slung over one shoulder.
Rachel froze, like a rabbit trapped by two wolves.
The tall Frenchman reached for Rachel--but another figure appeared between them, one of Tilia's black men. He blocked the tall man with the cross, giving Rachel a chance to jump for the door.
Out of the corner of her eye Rachel saw Philip, strong white teeth gleaming in a brown face, raise his bow. She heard the thrum of the string, and then a piercing scream. Anguish for the black man welled up in her.
Her torn robe was flapping as she ran out the door. She almost fell as someone seized the back of her robe and yanked on it. She twisted out of the robe and ran on, naked.
She heard John's shrill voice. He had reached the ground floor.
She was out of the house. In an instant her bare body was rain-wet from head to toe.
A group of big men holding horses stood across the street, under the overhang of the house opposite Tilia's. They were wearing swords and purple surcoats over mail s.h.i.+rts. They looked at her gloomily and made no move to stop her.
She had no idea where to go, but downhill was the easiest direction.
Maybe hide in an alley. Knock on a door and beg for help. Try to get across town to Sophia.
Anywhere, if only she could get away from John.
Many times she had nightmares of running from something that was trying to kill her. Sometimes a monster or a demon. Sometimes from crowds of roaring people carrying torches. Always in those dreams she could not make her legs move. It was like trying to run through water. Always she tried to scream for help and no sound would come from her throat but a whisper.
Now she was able to run full speed away from that house where death and destruction were running riot. And running as fast as she could was not enough! It would not get her away fast enough from John and his armed men and that horrible cardinal. She was able to scream at the top of her lungs, but to no avail. n.o.body would come to rescue her. n.o.body would help her.
She had also had nightmares about running through the street naked, with hundreds of people watching. In those dreams she had been horribly embarra.s.sed. Now she was really doing it, and she did not care about her nakedness.
She darted past the carts and the horses and mules and their drivers that filled the street from side to side. She was running naked and barefoot over the cobblestones.
She ran past the red and yellow cart at the head of the line of wagons and saw sitting beside the driver a man with a full white beard. He was looking down at her. For a moment she thought he was a rabbi. Then she saw his shaven scalp and brown robe. One of those Christian begging monks. He opened his mouth to say something to her, but she was past him already.
She heard hoofbeats behind her, and gooseflesh broke out all over her naked body.
_Dear G.o.d, is he chasing me on horseback?_
But she could dart into a quintana, the s.p.a.ce between two houses. It would be too narrow for a man on horseback to follow her. She saw an opening on her left and made for it, begging G.o.d to help her run faster.
She felt something whip around her body, tearing her skin. She was jerked off her feet. She fell on her back on the wet cobblestones. She lay helpless, stunned and gasping for air. A rope was cutting into her chest just below her b.r.e.a.s.t.s, pinning her arms above the elbows to her sides. The rope burned her. Her back felt sc.r.a.ped and bruised. She saw a horse's legs beside her. John was grinning down at her, holding the other end of the rope. The rain pouring down in her face stung her eyes.
Now that she knew she was caught and helpless, her terror was trans.m.u.ted into rage. What right had he to treat her this way?
"May G.o.d strike you dead!" she spat. He might not know the words, but she was sure he could hear the hatred in her voice.
He tugged on the rope to make her climb to her feet. She felt she would rather lie there and make him drag her, if he wanted her so badly, but she realized that would only hurt her worse.
She took a grip on the rope to haul herself up. The cold rain beat down, plastering her hair to her head. She wanted to wipe her face, but her arms were pinioned. Her back felt as if it were on fire.
She looked at Tilia's house and saw that a man's body was swinging, sodden and limp, above the door.
Her stomach turning at the sight, she recognized Ca.s.sio's features in the swollen, blackened face. They had hanged him from Tilia's crenellated balcony. And she had always thought he was such a big, tough man. She felt a stab of pity for him, even though he had never been especially nice to her.
Her heart grew heavier and colder in her chest as the horror sank in.
These men had destroyed Tilia's house, killed the men and raped the women with the gleeful cruelty of small boys stoning a bird's nest.
Another jerk on the rope started her walking back up the street. She kept her eyes down to avoid the sight of Ca.s.sio's body.
As they pa.s.sed the yellow cart, a voice called out to the Tartar, and he answered briefly in what seemed to be his own language. Again the voice, and there was command in the tone. John reined his horse to a stop.
Apprehension filled her. What new indignity would she have to suffer?
Very slowly, the brown-robed Christian priest climbed down from the cart. He pulled his hood up against the rain. Rachel put one hand between her legs and tried to cover her b.r.e.a.s.t.s with her forearm, lest he be offended. Fear and the cold rain beating down on her naked flesh made her s.h.i.+ver violently. She could not hope for kindness from this white-bearded man. After all, as a priest he must condemn her as a harlot. And if he found out she was a Jew, he would despise her all the more.
The priest reached up into the cart and took down a long walking staff and a gray blanket. Leaning on the staff, he approached her slowly.
Looking at her very sadly, unconcerned about the rain soaking his robe, he draped the blanket over her head and shoulders. She gripped the edges of the blanket and pulled it across her. As long as John's rope stayed slack, the blanket would cover her, although it was already cold and heavy with rainwater.
The kindness in the seamed, bearded face warmed Rachel, and she dropped to her knees before him.
"Help me, Father," she begged. "Do not let him take me away from here."
"Get up, child." Leaning heavily on the staff with one hand, he used the other to help her to her feet, and she saw how stiffly he moved and heard him give a little groan of pain.
"You are hurt, Father."
"Just a few old broken bones," he said. "It has been months, and they are mending well enough."
He reached under the blanket that covered her, and she shrank away from his hand.
"Forgive me," he said. "I mean no harm." Without looking at her, and hardly touching her, he managed to loosen the rope around her chest so that it fell to the ground. She stepped out of the loop, and it slid away from her. She looked up and saw John coil the rope and tie it to his saddle. His face was reddened and his mouth compressed with anger.
"It is useless to try to outrun a Tartar on horseback," said the priest.
"They are like centaurs. What is your name, child?"
As she told him, Rachel felt a glimmering of hope. The priest had spoken to John in his own language, and the Tartar seemed to have some respect for him. At least he was no longer trying to drag her away.
"I am Friar Mathieu d'Alcon," said the white-bearded priest. "What does this man want with you?"
Rachel felt a blush burn her face.
"He has lain with me, and he paid money to me and Madama Tilia," Rachel said, barely able to choke out the admission of her shame. "Now he is leaving Orvieto, and he wants to take me with him."
Friar Mathieu sighed and shook his head. "And so young. Jesus, be merciful." He turned to John and spoke to him in a soft, reasonable voice. Rachel sensed that the priest was chiding the Tartar gently.
John's answer was a series of short phrases, shrill with anger. He finished by slicing the air with his hand in a gesture of flat refusal.
Rachel's heart grew heavy with despair.
"He will not listen to me," said the friar. "He thinks he has a right to take you. His customs are not ours."
"But you are a priest. Does he not have to do what you tell him?"