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by Stephen Baxter


  He was aware of Joan and Saladin, swathed in their white Saracen-like robes, watching him with some bemusement.

  Joan led him into the heart of the city, with a serving boy who spoke not a word of English or Latin following behind with Thomas’s pack. Thomas was soon lost in the maze of jumbled streets. There was a feeling of crush, of shabbiness, and Thomas saw that some of the buildings had been assembled from broken and ancient stones. Age lay heavy here.

  To get to Joan’s home he was led through a narrow alley to an inner court around which tall houses clustered. Joan entertained him in a large open room, with a thick carpet and heavy hangings on the wall. The windows, just slits, were so small that oil lamps burned despite the intensity of the light outside. It was a room that might have graced an English manor, he thought. But this was not England, where you strove to keep in the warm; the room was hot and stuffy, thick with smoke, arid sweat started from his brow. It was an inappropriate, stubborn architecture.

  Joan served him watered wine. ‘You are an unaccustomed traveller, brother,’ she said.

  ‘I’m afraid so. I prefer to journey in the imagination, in the pages of my books, rather than to haul this weary carcass across land and sea.’

  ‘And yet you have come as far as Baldwin, and those who first took the Cross.’

  ‘The crusaders arrived fit to fight. They came to build kingdoms! I scarcely have the energy to make up a bed.’

  ‘Oh, that is done for you,’Joan said. ‘And while we don’t expect you to conquer the city for us, you must see it. I want Saladin to show you around. No, I insist.’

  Saladin nodded, looking surly, reluctant.

  Joan’s English was stilted, her accent a kind he had never heard the like of before. She was a slim woman, with a pretty, oval face and a pale, very English complexion - unlike her son, who was so dark he was all but invisible in the gloom of this absurd hall. The mother looked out of place here, a northern flower that ought to wilt in the sultry fire of the sun. Yet she was prospering, even though she had lost her husband and father before she was twenty.

  This was a complicated place, he reminded himself, the Christian culture of the Outremer an exotic transplantation that had survived in this alien soil for nearly a century and a half. He must keep his wits about him.

  ‘It is good to meet you, at last,’ he said. ‘I corresponded with your husband, and indeed your father before he passed your affairs on to your husband.’

  Joan smiled at her son. ‘Thus Brother Thomas has served our family’s interests for generations.’

  ‘You make me feel old,’ Thomas said. ‘But conversely your family’s generous bequests have sustained the good work of my house for just as long.’

  ‘Then we both benefit.’

  The boy did not seem very interested. ‘My mother said you have come to deliver a letter.’

  ‘Among other things.’ Thomas reached into his robe, and extracted a wallet of pigskin. He handed this wallet to Joan. ‘It is from your cousin in Cordoba, as I indicated. Subh, a matron of that city.’

  She drew out a bit of parchment, neatly folded but with a broken seal. She read a single underlined phrase. ‘Incendium Dei. I wonder what she means by that.’ She held the letter before her small nose. ‘I would like to imagine I can smell the oranges of Spain in the ink. Robert the Wolf would say little of his time in Spain, but he spoke of the orange trees. It’s the sort of detail that survives in the telling.’

  Thomas smiled. ‘It probably smells more of the sea by now, madam. I have one other piece of news for you. The Mongols.’

  ‘Their advance into Europe continues, does it?’ Joan asked.

  Thomas shook his head. ‘They turned back at the gates of Vienna.’

  ‘No!’

  ‘It happened just this summer. It was on the death of the great Khan Ogodai. The Mongol generals immediately returned to their capital, for it is their custom to gather there to debate the succession.’

  ‘Well, that’s not in old al-Hafredi’s foretelling.’

  ‘Truthfully the document is unclear, madam. I may know more later in the year; I intend to meet with the Pope’s legate, who was at the Mongol court when the reverse came. We must discuss the implications of this.’

  ‘Of course.’

  Saladin looked from one to the other. ‘You realise I have no idea what you’re talking about. Moorish cousins in Cordoba? The Mongols at Vienna? What does any of this have to do with us, here in Jerusalem?’

  ‘It’s a tangled story,’ Joan said. ‘It all stems from Robert and his strange adventures. You’ll learn it all, Saladin.’

  ‘I’d rather not,’ the boy said briskly.

  Thomas had come across warrior cubs like this before, who put sword-swinging ahead of scholarship. He saw it as part of God’s purpose for him to correct such attitudes; he did not believe God wanted ignorant soldiers. And in this case it was essential that Saladin understood. ‘It is your duty to hear.’

  ‘Really.’ Saladin got up abruptly. ‘I’ve got things to do. Find me when you’d like your tour of the walls, Brother Thomas. Mother.’ He nodded to Joan, and walked out.

  ‘I would apologise,’ Joan sighed. ‘But he’s always like this.’

  ‘I sense he has a good heart.’

  ‘And a strong soul,’ she said. ‘He’ll do what’s right.’ She glanced again at her letter from Cordoba. ‘Although I pray we will all find the way to do that.’

  IX

  Heading south-west along the bank of the Guadalquivir, Subh’s caravan slowly moved out of the hinterland of Cordoba, with its sprawling farms and market gardens and groves of orange trees. The country broadened to an immense plain, the horizon obscured by a ghostly heat shimmer. It was an arid, open, severe land, littered with ruined forts like the hulks of wrecked ships.

  Peter imagined it must be easy enough to get lost out here, on a land as vast and flat and featureless as an ocean. But not long after leaving the city they passed another mule train going the other way. The muleteers greeted each other noisily. In this sea of sand the muleteers were the navigators and the captains, stitching together the country with their endless journeying. And the muleteers sang, wailing muezzin-like melodies with earthy words in a rough Arabic. The songs were not so much long as open-ended, as one driver after another added a verse to an already complicated saga. So compelling were the choruses, so simple the melodies, that it was impossible not to join in, and the steady rhythm of the songs chimed with the pounding of the mules’ hooves.

  Peter, fanciful, found himself admiring the stoical simplicity of such a life. He envied the muleteers their sinewy strength, their obvious comfort on the rolling backs of their mules. To be bound into such a monkish routine, to learn to be able to do at least one thing exceptionally well, would itself be a kind of devotion. But he knew he could not bear such an elemental existence, not when there were cities full of books waiting to be read, a universe of philosophies to be contemplated.

  And he was not so naive as to idealise the muleteers’ life. They were all heavily armed, with knives, swords and cudgels, and none of the caravans was small enough to be vulnerable to attack by the pirates of this desert sea. The shifting frontier line between Christendom and Islam made this a dangerous country to travel, and it was well known that refugees from the lost Moorish cities, always streaming south, were easy targets for killers, rapists and thieves. Subh had taken care to plan against such a calamity for her party.

  On the second day Subh’s son Ibrahim rode alongside Peter for a while. On his handsome charger he looked down on Peter, who thudded along on the back of his reluctant old mule. Ibrahim was provocative from the off. ‘You are the only Christian in this caravan of Muslims. Even the muleteers are Muslim. Only you, out of place, and far from home. It is a certain kind of weakness, I believe, that drives a man to seek out the company of strangers. Why are you here, Christian Peter?’

  ‘For the scholarship.’

  Ibrahim hawked and spat. ‘Yo
u could have enjoyed your scholarship without leaving London. Do you have a wife in London? A woman you love?’

  ‘No wife or lover.’

  ‘A boy-’

  ‘I have no interest in boys, Ibrahim.’

  ‘Then what are you fleeing from?’

  ‘I’m fleeing nothing. I’m travelling in hope. I am following a loose thread in a tapestry, letting it lead me where it may. Your mother understands, I think.’ Peter grew impatient with his pressing. ‘Why should Christian and Muslim not share the adventure of life together? In Toledo, Christian and Muslim scholars meet and work together every day.’

  ‘Under the banners of a Christian king.’

  ‘Perhaps. But in the days of the caliphate Christian scholars similarly flocked to Muslim Cordoba.’

  Ibrahim said, ‘But there was no assimilation. Five centuries ago the Moorish armies marched north. The whole of Spain became a Muslim country, and Christians lived in a Moorish land. Now the Christians are scouring their way back down from the north, and Muslims will have to survive in a Christian country, as my family survived in Cordoba. No matter how long they cohabit, Muslim and Christian will not mix, any more than water and oil, whether there is more of the oil or more of the water.’

  Peter considered arguing against this. But the evidence for it stood all around him, the bristling relics of warfare sticking out of the ground like broken teeth. ‘All right. But here we are, Ibrahim, riding side by side. We don’t have to fight, do we?’

  Ibrahim eyed him, his eyes as bright as the sky. ‘Perhaps not. But keep your gaze fixed to the backside of that mule in front of you, and off my mother’s.’ And he galloped away to rejoin his friends.

  X

  In the morning Thomas woke early, barely able to believe that he was really here. But even before he left his bed the wail of the muezzin calls told him that this holiest of cities was not Christian, not entirely.

  Saladin came to find him. ‘We should take that walk while the day is young. I don’t imagine you will enjoy the noon heat.’

  So Thomas ate his breakfast and hurried through his prayers, and followed Saladin out into the city.

  Jerusalem was extraordinary, overwhelming, baffling, a warren of streets, a stew of history. On the Temple Mount, the gold cap of the Dome of the Rock gleamed like the sun brought down to earth, and beside it the silvery al-Aqsa mosque was light, airy, a dream in stone. The Muslims called the Mount al-Haram ash-Sharif: the Noble Holy Place. The Muslims were relative newcomers to Jerusalem, compared to the Jews and the Christians, but even they had already been here centuries.

  The city was full of churches, of course. Some of them, built by the crusader kings of Jerusalem, were quite modern, with ribbed vaults and pointed arches, and would have graced any city of western Christendom. Others were older, more squat and monumental. These were Roman, many of them built during the long centuries after the legions had left Britain. Thomas poked around these buildings, fascinated.

  But as he talked and analysed and speculated, Saladin hardly spoke. To him, Thomas thought, history meant little. Jerusalem was nothing but an arena for the warfare he expected to dominate his life, as it had the lives of his ancestors since Robert, who had come here with the First Crusade that had swept through the Holy Land like a fiery wind.

  The Christian states the crusaders planted here had survived three generations, until fortune threw up a great Muslim commander: a former vizier from Egypt, al-Malik al-Nasir Salah ed-Din Yusuf, known to the Christians as Saladin, who marched on Jerusalem. Even Richard the Lionheart was not strong enough to take back the holy city. Today Jerusalem was ruled under an agreement negotiated by the German emperor Frederick II, the nominal king of Jerusalem. The city had been left unfortified, and Muslims were allowed to remain; it was a shabby deal. Still, some of the old Christian families, like Joan’s, had crept back into the city which they had regarded as their home for generations.

  So much for warfare. But, Thomas asked himself, what kind of people were these folk of the Outremer?

  The boy Saladin was an ardent Christian, that was certain; here on the front line of Christendom you would expect a sharpening of the faith. But he looked more Saracen than English, with his flowing robes, his dark skin, and Thomas had heard him jabber Arabic phrases as easily as he spoke his stilted English. Thomas guessed that there had been a few infusions of Saracen blood into his line over the generations. Saladin’s deepest ancestry was English, but transplanted to the soil of Palestine for generations his kind had become something different, neither English nor Palestinian, something new in the world since the time of Robert.

  And these new people of the Outremer were isolated, in a way that the Norman invaders of England, say, were not. King William’s sons had taken English wives; after nearly two centuries their assimilation was complete. But Normans and English were both Christians. In the Outremer the remnants of the crusader kingdoms were islands of Christianity in a sea of Islam. This was Saladin’s home, but his family would always be out of place here. And Thomas sensed that Saladin knew it in some deep part of his soul.

  The day grew warmer, and the old city became a stone bowl full of hot, dry air. Thomas was grateful when Saladin took pity on him and led him back to the relative shade of Joan’s house.

  XI

  As they rode steadily south-west and closed on Seville, the caravan entered Muslim lands.

  Before the city they came upon an extensive Moorish army camp. It was a town of tents, men, horses, mules and camels, planted near the river bank; flags bearing the crescent hung limply in the heavy air. Weapons were piled up in huge mounds, shields and crossbows and spears supplied by the factories of Seville. Peter could hear the pounding of war drums, not coordinated but still a chilling sound, like distant thunder.

  A party of troops rode out to meet the caravan, an officer and a small escort of hard-eyed desert horsemen. The officer wore a coat of quilted felt over mail armour, while the horsemen wore white robes and turbans; they carried spears and shields shaped like hearts. Subh had a letter, a conduct of safe-keeping from the emir in Seville. After an exchange of gifts - a bag of gold from Subh, some water carriers from the soldiers - the troops rode off back to their camp.

  The muleteers made a wide detour away from the river to avoid the soldiers, and Peter was relieved, for everybody knew that the best-controlled soldiers were always liable to a little plunder, robbery and rapine. But he studied the camp, fascinated at the sight of a genuine Moorish army. It was odd that there were no wheeled vehicles to be seen, but along with mules the horses were gathered in great herds - imported from the Balearic islands, said Ibrahim, only the best for the army. And out of the ranks of the horses and mules rose the necks of haughty camels, brought over from Africa.

  The core of the army was made up of levies raised on the provinces of al-Andalus, or what was left of it - cavalry from Granada, for instance. Ibrahim pointed to groups of soldiers with dark faces, ‘the silent soldiers’ he called them dismissively, many of them Berbers who spoke no Arabic. But the most ardent fighters of all, said Ibrahim, were the volunteers who came here from across the Islamic world to ‘the land of the jihad’, as many Muslims called Spain. It was just as the crusading armies were made up of volunteers from across Christendom. Peter was awed to imagine the energies of two continent-spanning civilisations focused here on this place, this point in space and time.

  The caravan was allowed to enter Seville without incident.

  The city was more of a sprawl than Cordoba, and had long eclipsed its illustrious rival, becoming the capital of the Almohad rulers of al-Andalus. And, though Cordoba had fallen, this remained a Muslim city, not a Christian one; the crescent flew high over the domes and minarets, not the cross, and there was nothing plaintive about the muezzins’ calls to prayer.

 

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