Knight of the Cross

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Knight of the Cross Page 3

by Steven A McKay


  “There!” Jacob pointed at a sliver of light that was shining from under a doorway in front of them. “It's coming from in there.”

  Sir Richard tried to open the door but it was locked from inside, so he hammered the pommel of his sword against the door. “Open up! Open the door in the name of Christ!”

  Again there was another scream, this time coming from the woman and all the children that were inside the room and the Hospitaller had had enough.

  “Stand back!” he roared. “Get away from the door, we're coming in!”

  Without waiting for a reply Sir Richard leaned backwards, lifted his right leg and rammed his foot against the thick door, just beside the latch.

  The wood held up but the latch was flimsy and, with a crack of splitting metal the door burst open and the knight moved carefully into the room, his longsword held defensively before him as Jacob following at his back, his own blade held at the ready.

  “What's going on in here?” the knight demanded, eyes searching the room for any threat but finding nothing obvious.

  The terrified woman pointed at her husband who lay on the bed, unmoving, and Sir Richard shuddered slightly at the expression on the man's face. He was clearly dead, although there didn't appear to be a wound on him, but his eyes were open and his expression was frozen in one of sheer terror.

  The children cried and hid their faces against their mother's side, her thin arms squeezing them protectively as the tears streaked her tired face.

  Jacob moved around the room, searching for an enemy as Sir Richard asked, more gently this time, what had happened to the man.

  “He began groaning in his sleep,” she replied, her voice almost cracking. “It woke me up and I tried to shake him awake but he just kept making that noise, getting louder and louder. Then...” She stopped, shaking fearfully, “his eyes opened and he screamed as if he could see something in the room. I thought he must be dreaming – having a nightmare – but I turned to show him there was nothing there and...”

  “Devil!” one of the children cried out, little knuckles white as he gripped his mother's arm, “the Devil was here – it killed our daddy!”

  Sir Richard and Jacob glanced at each other, both thinking the same thing: Dagon.

  Father Vitus appeared in the doorway, his dark eyes calmly taking in the scene before he moved across to the family and, kneeling beside them, began the Lord's Prayer in an attempt to comfort them. “Pater imon, o en tis ouranis, aghiasthito to onoma sou; eltheto i vasilia sou; ghenithito to thelima sou, os en ourano, ke epi tis ghis...”

  “The devil was here,” the Greek woman nodded tearfully over the drone of Father Vitus's voice. “Huge and thin he was, like a horrible insect without any face, and he...” She broke down again as she looked across at her dead husband's terror-stricken face. “He did that! On holy ground too, how could this happen!”

  Sir Richard and Jacob examined the dead man as the little priest tried to soothe the angry, terrified woman, but they could find no visible cause of death. Eventually, the Hospitaller closed the man's eyelids respectfully and made the sign of the cross, saying a silent prayer for his soul.

  “Whatever happened,” the knight straightened up and addressed the priest and the frightened, grieving woman, “there's no devil here now. We're sorry for your loss, and if we can do anything to help, you have but to ask. Come, Jacob, let's return to our room and leave these people alone to grieve.”

  The sound of Father Vitus's calm prayers followed them along the corridor as they returned to their room. Sir Richard shook his head, imagining he could detect a note of triumph – or perhaps it was pleasure – in the little Greek's voice.

  * * *

  The Hospitallers didn't sleep much for the rest of the night. A strange thumping noise seemed to fill the air outside periodically, apparently coming from somewhere nearby yet deep underground. Sir Richard knew there must be a prosaic explanation for the noise – a local mine working through the night perhaps – but the unearthly sound was unsettling, particularly for the superstitious Jacob, and especially after the events of earlier.

  As the pair made their way to the small dining area in the morning they quietly discussed what might await them. Athenais was there, and she'd laid on a large but simple breakfast for the two soldiers, but when Sir Richard tried to find out what was happening with the bereaved family the girl simply shrugged her slim shoulders and said she didn't know anything about it.

  “That little bastard's got her scared,” Jacob growled when the girl left the room to complete the rest of her duties around the house.

  Sir Richard offered no reply. Athenais did seem somewhat subdued around them, and Father Vitus's veiled looks whenever he saw her suggested there might be some truth to his sergeant's fears but, well, it was nothing to do with them. They were here to find out why three of their brothers had disappeared, not to get involved in the relationship between the priest and his housekeeper, whatever it might be.

  They finished their meal with no sign of the family or Father Vitus – to Sir Richard's annoyance, as he'd wanted to question the priest in detail about the night's events – and so they left the church to continue their investigation at the local market, hoping for more success than they'd enjoyed the day before.

  “You, sir! My lord!” A trader spied them as they wandered around the dusty streets, smile bright against his dark complexion, ingratiating and false as he hurried over in the hope of making a sale. “You look like men who have seen much evil. I have just the thing you need!” He opened his grubby jacket to reveal an assortment of poor quality jewellery. “Any of these will bring you good luck and protect you from harm. A man like you surely needs protection from the forces of darkness!” He gazed at Sir Richard slyly and the knight was struck by the man's pupils which were unnaturally dark given the bright sun that blazed overhead.

  “You're right,” the Hospitaller agreed, to the disgust of Jacob who grunted loudly, surprised that his master would be taken in by the shoddy pieces the seller was hawking. “I've seen many wicked, evil things in my time as a soldier. What's your name?”

  “Leontios, my lord,” the trader replied, moving in closer as Sir Richard continued in a low, conspiratorial tone.

  “Most of my brother knights could use the protection you offer,” the knight nodded. “Are these charms powerful?”

  The man grinned, trying to conceal his glee at the knight's gullibility. “Sire, these may look like any other piece of high-quality jewellery for sale in the market, but” – he peered around as if he expected someone to be listening to their conversation before continuing – “these are endowed with powerful magic. It's perhaps better you don't know where their power comes from, but you can be sure they'll defend you against the devil and his many servants. I promise you, as a Christian man myself!”

  “How much?” Sir Richard asked. “Not just for one of your stunning pieces, but for, say, ten, that I may give as gifts to some of the other Hospitallers?”

  The seller practically rubbed his hands as he realised this English knight with the eight-pointed cross emblazoned on his red surcoat was ready to pay whatever price he demanded in return for his worthless pieces of glass. “Well, my lord” – he began, the sentence tailing off as Sir Richard produced his coin purse and emptied a sizeable amount of silver into his palm. “I would say” –

  “What do you know of Dagon, Leontios?” the Hospitaller growled, looking into the eyes of the trader who found it hard to tear his gaze from the small fortune in the knight's hand. “And the disappearances that have been plaguing the area? Rest assured,” he muttered into the man's ear, “none will know of your help in this. I simply seek information. And...if your information proves valuable to me I have gold as well as silver back in our citadel...”

  The trader pondered the situation for a moment before reaching out for the silver coins in Sir Richard's hand, the lure of the money proving greater than any reticence he shared with the other market-goers at talkin
g about the dark folklore of the island.

  “I know much,” he promised, glaring at Sir Richard who pulled the handful of coins out of reach of his grasping fingers.

  “Then tell me! Where can I find these people?” Too fast for the eye to follow, a dagger appeared in the Hospitaller's hand and the trader shrank back as the point pressed against his windpipe, Jacob moving in at his back to stop him moving out of reach. “Your choice. Hospitaller silver filling your pockets or my steel in your windpipe.”

  The man glared at him before he dropped his eyes to the money still held invitingly in the Hospitaller's left hand. He looked up, the ingratiating smile again painted across his odd face and he nodded in acquiescence.

  “I'll show you where to find the men you seek.”

  * * *

  “This is the way we came last night, chasing that man from the market,” Jacob noted as they left the busy village and moved into the countryside. “I remember passing those houses on the outskirts; one of them had a strange symbol painted on a flat stone beside it; like a line with five smaller lines branching off it.”

  Sir Richard nodded agreement. “I remember it too.” His hand strayed to his weapon. “Be ready for another ambush, although I'm pretty sure this guide of ours is more interested in our money than seeing us dead.”

  They moved at a steady pace for a while, passing through open countryside until they saw a small settlement in the near-distance, bordered by fields in which the locals, presumably, grew crops.

  As they walked, Sir Richard looked at his sergeant, noticing Jacob's gaze fixed on something in the field they were passing. The knight squinted, trying to see what had attracted his man's attention, although the harsh bright sunshine made it difficult for him to see. “What is it?” he muttered.

  Jacob's eyes never left the point on which they were focused as he replied. “A man. In the field, there.”

  Sir Richard finally spotted the figure that had captivated his sergeant. It was a man with in a wide-brimmed hat some distance away, wearing long trousers and a long-sleeved red coat despite the heat, and he was returning their stare.

  The man never moved at all as the Hospitallers and their guide walked past, just standing, still like a statue, only his head seeming to turn slightly as he kept the travellers in sight.

  “He's been stood there without moving the whole time,” Jacob said. “Just watching us pass by.”

  Sir Richard made the sign of the cross, unsettled by the malevolent figure's lack of movement.

  “That's not a man,” their guide waved a hand dismissively, listening to their conversation. “It's a straw man. Farmers use them to frighten birds away. Have you never seen one before?”

  “A straw man!” Sir Richard laughed, slapping his sergeant on the back with a grin. “Well, that would explain why it's not bloody moving! Come on, Jacob, you're jumping at shadows here, let's get a move on.”

  They continued at a greater pace, the knight trying to engage their Greek guide in conversation about the local disappearances without success.

  Jacob turned to the field again just as they entered the village they'd been in the previous evening. “Straw man is it, eh?” he growled. “Fastest fucking straw man I've ever seen then.”

  Sir Richard and Leontios looked back over their shoulders and the Hospitaller again made the sign of the cross.

  The figure was gone.

  * * *

  “What's the name of this place?” Sir Richard asked. “We were here last night, but the priest that's putting us up couldn't think where it was when we described it to him.”

  “Krymmeni̱ Thesi,” the guide replied, giving the knight an unfathomable look. “I don't know why the priest couldn't tell you that: everyone knows this place. It's been here for aeons. ”

  Aeons. Odd choice of word Sir Richard thought, looking around at the little village. This time there were people – locals – in the streets or sitting outside the ramshackle little stone houses, watching with suspicious glares as they passed.

  “I'll leave you here now.” Their guide suddenly stopped, his hand stretched out towards Sir Richard, looking for payment for his services.

  “You'll leave no-one, yet,” the big knight retorted, his eyes burning, despite the control in his voice. “You've brought us here, but we need to find the men that are behind the disappearances. You'll take us to them, as agreed, and then we'll see about your payment.”

  The Greek's face grew angry, but it was clear he wouldn't see any more silver unless he fulfilled his promise. “All right, my lords,” he shrugged. “Follow me.”

  The man walked off, at a brisk pace, towards the eastern side of Krymmeni Thesi.

  Soon they came into sight of what appeared to be an excavation by the side of the road, touching on the land adjoining a run-down, apparently unoccupied house. The three men halted at the sight of the crudely armed guards, as Leontios didn't want to be seen by them.

  “That's where you need to go,” their guide told them. “Not those men,” he clarified, waving a hand dismissively. “The leaders are underground, in the tunnels those fools are guarding. Now...” he grinned wolfishly at Sir Richard, holding his hands out expectantly.

  “Fair enough,” the knight agreed. “I'll pay you this for the moment.” He handed the guide a few small silver coins. “If your information proves useful I'll seek you out at the market and quadruple that!”

  The man turned with a smile and hurried off the way they had come as the Hospitaller shouted after him. “How did you know these men were here?”

  “Everyone knows,” the guide threw back over his shoulder. “They're just too frightened to say or do anything about it.”

  “Then why aren't you too frightened...”

  The Greek ignored the question, picking up pace until he was out of sight amongst the houses lining the road and Jacob snorted.

  “Men like him don't feel fear; not when there's a coin to be made.”

  “Well, whatever his motives,” the knight replied, moving towards the swarthy, weather-beaten men standing around the ruined tunnel entrance, “he brought us where we wanted to be. Let's see what we can find here.”

  The men remained lounging against the ancient, low sandstone wall that formed a crescent around the stairs leading down to the tunnel but the Hospitallers' trained eyes noticed the slight stiffening of limbs as they prepared themselves either for fight or flight.

  “What can we do for you knights of the cross?” the eldest of the men asked, his face set in a scowl. Presumably this was the foreman. His pupils were so big that they obscured the iris and, looking at the rest of the guards Sir Richard realised all had the same sinister black eyes. They must eat some strange mushroom or something else native to Rhodes that makes them go like that, he thought, unconsciously raising his hand to touch the crucifix he wore around his neck.

  “For starters, you can stand aside,” he growled, “so my sergeant and I can take a look down there.”

  “You can't!” One of the guards raised his shovel threateningly towards them.

  The foreman waved an angry hand for the worker to be silent. “Forgive this man's...exuberance,” he growled to Sir Richard. “He speaks truly, though. You can't go down there – it's a religious site.”

  “I don't give a damn if it's the Garden of Gethsemane,” Jacob replied, moving forward to place his face in front of the Greek foreman's. “We're going down there, whether you like it or not.”

  The other workers – four of them – stood up, hefting the spades and brushes they'd apparently been using to keep the stairway clear of sand, obviously prepared to use violence to stop these two invaders from entering their tunnel.

  “My sergeant's right,” Sir Richard spoke into the strained silence, the authority in his voice lending an air of much-needed calm to proceedings. “We are going down there. Whether you let us pass now, or whether we have to return with fifty fully armed Hospitaller knights to force our way inside...it's up to you. But if I return
with more of my brethren I'll make sure this place is brought down about your ears.” He moved forward to stand beside Jacob, and glared at the furious foreman. “We're the authority on this island now, so you'd better get used to it. Now...what's it to be?”

  He placed his weight on his left leg and calmly drew his sword while Jacob followed his master's lead with a smile.

  “Why do you want to go down? What d'you think's down there?”

  “We were told this place might have something to do with the Hospitallers that disappeared recently,” Sir Richard replied. “I give you my word as a Christian: when we go in we'll treat the place with the respect it deserves.”

  For a short time the foreman stood, apparently mulling over his limited options, the workmen at his back still bristling with the potential for violence.

  “Go,” he finally told them. “But be quick. You'll not find what you're looking for, though, you're wasting your time.”

  “My thanks to you.” The Hospitaller bowed slightly in gratitude and walked past him, sheathing his sword as he went down the stairs and through the heavy wooden door that lay slightly ajar, Jacob following at his back.

  Inside was a simple antechamber lit by torches which led into the gently sloping tunnel they walked along now, senses straining for signs of danger, or any clue as to what this place might be used for. The air in the tunnel was cool, but there was an unnerving smell which the two men couldn't place. It told of ancient decay and unnameable horror, as if from some long-forgotten memory, and it made the hairs on the back of Sir Richard's neck stand up as they moved deeper into the claustrophobic darkness.

  Some of the walls bore crude carvings, showing strange animals or insects which the Englishmen couldn't recognize; indeed, the carvings seemed to show beings that didn't look like they belonged to this world at all, but the guttering torches that hung on the walls were few and far between and it was difficult to make out much detail in the stone depictions.

 

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