by Harold Lamb
"A fairer country," announced Michael, as the rain cleared, "with vineyards and date groves. On, to the Grand Cham! "
Looking back, Clavijo beheld a majestic summit, snow-crowned, with bare slopes rising to the height of the Alps.
"The Holy Mount Ararat," he said bravely, and crossed himself. "Forward, signori-if you have heart to face the dangers that beset that other mountain of skulls."
Their followers were not overeager. Some of the few servants were sick. Rudolfo's men-at-arms, accustomed to the machine-like wars of Italy, where an army marched but a league a day and where every hillside had its village and food and women, and the peasants had to bear the burden of both armies-Rudolfo's men muttered and sulked, except the lieutenant Gian.
Some whispered that the party was followed, that the spirits of the castle kept at their heels. Others pointed to distant bands of horsemen on the plain, bands that Clavijo declared were Moors and pagans and Michael asserted to be Turks.
One night Gian and several men stole away, to rifle houses in a village. They returned with poor spoil but many tales. Bembo, who had slipped off to accompany them, stoutly asserted that he had beheld a monster walking among the houses of the Moors or Saracens or whatever the heathens might be.
He thought at first the animal had been sitting down, until it had moved off at the approach of the men.
"Signori," he protested, "it was still sitting down, yet it ran. It had the body of a horse, spotted like a snake, the legs of a deer and the head of a stag. And its neck! Beshrew me, signori, may I never eat pudding again if its neck did not rise up from its body like Gian's spear when he lances an apple from a peasant's tree. Nay, it was as tall as the mast of a ship, for the monster stopped and smelled of fruit over a garden wall that was too high for us to climb."
Bembo had seen a giraffe.
This interested Michael, for he had never heard of such animals in Asia Minor.
After this inroad upon the inhabitants, the Venetians were shunned more than ever. A hot sun beat upon their heavy garments. The road they followed was no more than a track of deep mud.
Clavijo was very unhappy. For, in spite of his brave tale, he had never before been farther east than Constantinople. And the last thing he wished was to return, a prisoner, into the Venetian power that stretched even to Trebizond.
And then came the night when, encamped at a short distance from the road, they were awakened during the last hour of darkness by the rushing sound of horses' hoofs passing by along the road.
They saw nothing of the riders, only heard the horses sweeping past with incredible speed. Clavijo wondered fearfully what kind of men could ride at that pace in the darkness.
Dawn revealed the bodies of three of his servants, their throats cut, lying by the ashes of the campfire.
"It was the spirits of the waste!" cried Soranzi. "We must hasten; we are near the city in the sands."
The merchant pointed to thin traces of sand in the earth. But when they looked for footprints of the assassins approaching their camp they found nothing. Nothing, that is, except the hoof-marks that were quite fresh in the road nearby. Michael, however, knew that Cian's excursion into the village had brought the pursuers upon their tracks.
Clavijo was more than a little superstitious. He fancied that the phantoms he had summoned up by his words had pursued their steps. The spirits that he had invoked had taken form. In his tale he had said that his servants met death.
"Hasten!" he cried. "Away from here!"
The three bodies were buried in a shallow grave. There were now only eight attendants-Bembo, a sick servant of Clavijo who was carried in a litter, Gian and his four men, and Soranzi's servant.
When the pack animals were loaded and trudging forward, Michael reined his horse in beside the Spaniard.
"Signor Clavijo," he said softly. "You have left the path that we were following. By the sun, unless I am blind, you are taking us in a circle. Wherefore?"
The Spaniard pointed toward the site of the distant camp.
"Death is upon us. We are in the land of Gog and Magog, where djins pursue Christian travelers. Oh, it is an evil day!"
"Do djins cast a dagger, a heavy poniard, with bronze hilt overlaid in silver, at a Christian's back? On shipboard?"
The black eyes of Clavijo widened.
"Nay, forsooth! You describe the dagger once owned by Gian. I have not seen it since-"
"Rudolfo, your friend, threw it into the sea. Come, signor, here is need of truth."
"As God is my witness, I have spoken the truth."
"About Cathay? And the Grand Cham?"
Clavijo was silent, sullen almost.
"Signor, the death of your men ends all buffoonery. You were their master-"
"Por dios!" Clavijo's full face went livid. "Do you suspect me of that? I did not do it. Nor do I know aught of the dagger cast at you."
Michael glanced at him thoughtfully. "Then confess to me, signor, that you never saw the court of the Grand Cham."
"Master Bearn-" Clavijo started, and drew a long breath. "You heard what I told the council. Have you not believed?
"Have you not seen the holy Mount Ararat and heard Bembo relate the aspect of the strange beast of-" he lifted his head stubbornly"Cathay?"
Michael laughed shortly. "Faith, signor, it would take a magician of Cathay himself to tell what is true and what is false." He checked the other's exclamation. "Nay, listen. I have sounded the bottom of your tale. You were in Constantinople, not Cathay. Your wonders were garbled stories of travelers picked up on the jetties and in the markets. Your city-an illusion of the sands that some call by a strange name-a mirage. Your tower of skulls-a heap of stones."
"The Grand Cham-"
"Of him will we soon learn."
Clavijo shrugged.
"You heard the emperor at Trebizond speak of a great Tatar king."
At this Michael smiled.
"Man, you are wonderful. You pulled wool over the sharp eyes of the Signory, and beguiled two emperors. It has been a rare jest, this voyage. I could love you for that. Nay, I cannot think that you wished to stick me in the back, or to slay those poor fools."
He nodded thoughtfully.
"If a man's child could tell when you lied and when not, I would be your friend, Gonzales. This much I will do for you. You cannot turn back. Soranzi's greed is fired by the strange sights he has seen and yearns for his promised profits. Rudolfo will not give in to you, unless he is in your confidence-"
"God forbid!"
"That had the ring of truth. Well, by my reckoning we are near the Tatar tribes. Now that death dogs our steps we cannot push on blindly. We are followed, without doubt. I shall strike back along our track and seek to take captive one of the riders, whether Armenian or djin, and make him tell us where we are and what is in store for us and why we are followed. Do you, call a halt to rest the beasts and await my coming. Do you agree?"
Clavijo chewed his beard, and flushed.
"As you will, Master Bearn. We will wait."
It is more than possible if Michael Bearn could have had his way that Clavijo and those with him, who were yet alive and well, might have returned in safety to Trebizond.
The Breton was barely gone, however, when events took another turn. Rudolf o had been more silent than his wont that morning and now he dismounted, nodded to Gian, and strode to Clavijo's side.
"Signor, your sword and dagger."
The Spaniard drew back, surprised. Whereupon Rudolfo reached out and secured the weapons for himself without trouble. Gian and another soldier took spear and poniard from Soranzi's servant. Seeing this, Rudolfo turned to the merchant, who was armed only with a knife.
"Messer Soranzi, an unpleasant duty has fallen upon me. Since leaving Venice I have suspected this Spaniard of deceit. By the rood, it is plain that he knows not the way he follows. Just now he has doubled on his tracks. I think his tale was but a pretext to get money from the honorable council."
Soranzi's
little eyes narrowed and his thin face darkened. He cast a venomous look at the unhappy Spaniard.
"Witness, Messer Soranzi," continued the condottiere, "that this deceiver cannot speak the language of the country he claims to have trav eled. He would have left us at Cabasica and taken the Cham's presents with him."
Conviction leaped into the twisted face of the merchant and he shook with rage.
"The man's face declares you have the right of it," he hissed. "What can we do?"
"This. I am the leader of the men-at-arms. I take command, forsooth! Every man except the five troopers and myself must give up arms. You, Soranzi, assume charge of the money, articles of trade, and gifts. Take an inventory of the goods, and keep it. The -himself knows in what quarter this liar has led us. We will strike back to Trebizond and consult further-Ha, dog! Would you do that?"
The roving eye of the condottiere had fallen upon Bembo as the hunchback was stealing away quietly in the direction Michael had taken along the back track. Rudolfo spurred after him and struck the jester into the mud with his mailed fist, leaning down from the saddle to glare at him.
Bembo rose, drew his wooden sword from his girdle with a flourish and handed it to Rudolfo.
"You have overcome me, vi et armis. Take my sword."
Rudolfo's answer was to cast the thing away contemptuously; nevertheless he kept a wary glance on the jester.
"We will wait for Master Bearn," he said shortly. "When he returns he must answer on the spot for the death of the three varlets."
Now Bembo would have given a leg to be able to run off and acquaint his friend with what had happened. The fool, like most unfortunates who are crippled in body, was sensitive to impressions.
He was afraid of Rudolfo, and more afraid of Gian. He looked upon Michael as his sole protector and Michael would presently walk back, armed only with a sword, to where his enemy waited with a half-dozen men-at-arms.
These same men were alert and eager, pleased at the chance of reaching Trebizond again. Bembo noticed that they did not seem surprised at the turn in affairs, and that Gian was a-grin.
"Saint Bacchus aid me and keep good Cousin Michael away," he prayed. "Or our guts are in the saucepan!"
They had not long to wait. Michael stepped from between two trees against which the men-at-arms were sitting at the road's edge. He had come through the dense thorn thicket without a sound.
Rudolf o and Soranzi were not a little disturbed by this sudden apparition in their midst of the man for whom they were looking down the road. The captain of mercenaries glanced at the thicket and saw that half-hidden within it was a queer kind of native shrine-a mere heap of stones with rags stuck upon sticks hanging over it.
Soranzi tried to read the Breton's harsh face-a task that was no longer easy. Michael's brown eyes were half-closed and the merchant noted that he worked the fingers of his right hand slowly as if testing long unused muscles.
"Signor," said Michael to Rudolfo, "I heard, while I was coming through yonder thicket, some words of yours. You made bold, methinks, to say that I slew the three varlets. Is it not so?"
Michael glanced around the ring of faces that had gathered close to him. The men-at-arms were gaping, fingering their weapons, intent on Rudolfo. It was significant of the natures of the leaders that Michael seemed, for the moment at least, to enjoy the mastery of the situation.
His dark face was lighted by a kind of inward amusement, while Rudolfo was pulling at his mustache with lowered eyes. The watching attendants ignored Soranzi and Clavijo, knowing that the test of leadership lay between the Breton and their own captain.
"And reason enow!" said the latter curtly. "Fore , masters, here have we a lowborn churl who stinks of the sea and who bears the scars of slavery on his wrists and back. Since our landing he has held intercourse with the pagans of the countryside. Aye, did he not interfere on behalf of the knavish robbers of Cabasica? And warn my good Gian from his excursion into the native village some time since? What more of reason would you have?"
This arraignment, although it satisfied the servitors, raised grave doubts in the keen mind of Soranzi-doubts which were heightened when Michael responded gravely that he had slept in a tent with Clavijo the night before and that the Spaniard could testify that he had not left the tent until aroused by the others.
"Yet," growled Rudolfo, who was gaining confidence, "you can walk out of a wood without a sound. Why can you not move even more silently in the hours of darkness when the evil powers are strong? There is black magic in the air, by the rood! How else could riders gallop like the wind-as those we heard anon-when an honest Christian cannot see where to put his foot to earth?"
"Master Bearn speaks the truth," broke in Clavijo bluntly, "and-my head on it-he is an honest Christian."
"You are not lacking in lies," growled Rudolfo. "We may no longer believe you. Moreover, by the mouth of his friend Bembo, the Breton stands accused."
Michael glanced at the hunchback keenly. He would have staked his life on the fool's faith. The tie between the two had been strengthened by the hardships of the journey.
In fact it was pity for the hunchback that had impelled Michael to join the party again. He had been approaching them through the thicket, moving silently as was his custom, when Rudolfo's loudly spoken threats arrested him.
Understanding that the condottiere had taken the leadership of the party from Clavijo, and that the Italian's first blow would be against himself, Michael had been strongly inclined to part company with the others and strike for the Tatar country that he knew could not be far from here.
Thus far the course of the voyagers had fitted in with the plans of Michael, who was anxious to appear before the khan as an accredited representative of a European power, with the gifts that experience had taught him were needful in gaining the friendship of an Oriental monarch.
More than once he had steered Clavijo to the west, away from the south where bands of Turkish irregulars were thick. Michael had no desire to be brought a second time before Bayezid as a captive.
Now Rudolfo had seized the reins, and while Michael could not know precisely what intrigue the condottiere had in view, he knew that Rudolfo had penetrated as far into terra incognita as he dared to go, and alsoafter events had shaped themselves to the Italian's satisfaction-he would be most likely to head back to Trebizond as soon as he had the treasure of the expedition in his hands.
It was the sight of the blow Bembo received, and his warm love of the cripple, that brought Michael to face Rudolfo.
"'Tis a lie-" Bembo had started to cry when Rudolfo's cold glance shut him up as a knife-thrust closes a turtle.
"Bembo had gossiped with my men," he said dryly. "The fool hinted that his master was bent hither on revenge. What revenge should he seek save against me with whom he has a feud as good Messer Soranzi knows well? Aye, and against the Signory of Venice that requited him with scant usury for his services."
Bembo hung his head. It was true that he had liked to babble of the Breton's prowess.
The others nodded in owl-like wisdom. In the minds of the servitors Rudolfo had gained the mastery over Michael. Soranzi and Clavijo were puzzled. Michael, who was by no means a slow thinker, sensed the drift away from him.
"I must take measures for our safety," Rudolfo was saying, "for the pagans are close on our heels. Bind me this miscreant."
"Verily-" Michael smiled quickly-"you are a rare leader, signor. Were you not among the captains of Nicopolis? Did not you, Clavijo, see him there? Rudolfo saw you?"
"Aye," admitted the Spaniard.
"Then answer me one question. If you saw Clavijo at Nicopolis, Rudolfo, why then must you have known he lied, even when you embarked with us upon this venture. Why were you fain to wait until now to accuse him?"
The condottiere could not repress a scowl at this sudden thrust, but he answered composedly:
"I may have seen him at the battle by the river, but a pox on't! I marked him not. Verily I did not recall his
face when he told his tale at Venice."
Rudolfo lied well. Michael, failing to catch him off his guard, turned to Soranzi, who was too shrewd a judge of men and too alert where his own money was at risk to be convinced by Rudolfo's charge against Michael.
"Your lives, signori," the Breton said gravely, "are at stake. Would you know why?"
They were silent at that and the thin mouth of the merchant pinched together as he answered-
"Why?
"You call it black magic-faith-when horsemen gallop i' the night, signors. Nay, they were Tatars who ride with a loose rein in day or dark. I know because I have this hour caught one who followed in our trail. Some news I had from him. War threatens between the Turk and the Tatar-the sultan and the khan. Signori, these be mighty monarchs and their bands of riders on this borderland are more numerous than the good people of Venice itself."
"Then," Soranzi's logical mind probed for information, "the Tatars slew our men last night?"
Rudolfo and Gian glanced at Michael, who shook his head gravely.
"Nay. The Tatars passed us as the wind passes. Our varlets were slain by Kurds of the village that Gian and his men visited. So said my prisoner. After Bembo left the place, frightened by sight of the sitting-down beast, our brave men-at-arms made themselves free of the women of the village, the Kurdish warriors of the place being absent with the riders of the Turkish army."
Gian and the others were silent at this and uneasy, lacking Rudolfo's calm.
"Two Kurds only reached our camp in the night," went on Michael, "or our throats as well might have been cut. The Moslems do not forget a wrong, Rudolfo. Wherefore, death follows in your track."
"And what manner of man was he you caught?" inquired Soranzi uncomfortably.
"A Tatar who sighted our cavalcade and followed 'till more of his fellows could be summoned and our merchants despoiled. Mark me, Soranzi, the Tatars are grim enow, yet they attack boldly and do not slit throats i' the night. Nay, they would rip your belly with a sword. You would fare better with them."