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by Stephen Baxter

But Sihtric snorted his contempt. 'Waste your money on this weasel-eyed camel-driver if you like. I'll have nothing to do with it.'

  So Marwam joined the party. As they left, a gaggle of little children ran out onto the road to wave them off, shrieking and jumping, all of them as rodent-faced as Marwam.

  Marwam was the first authentic Moor Robert had met – not a mixed-blood like Moraima, or a descendant of a Gothic Christian like Ibn Hafsun – and Robert watched him curiously. Dressed in swathes of grubby white cloth, Marwam was a wiry man who looked as at home on a camel as on foot. As they rode along he sang wailing, nasal songs, the songs of a desert people sung in a country that had once been Roman. But Robert thought that sometimes he was singing to Moraima, for he would gaze at her with deep brown eyes, his words sung in an unfamiliar tongue making Moraima blush.

  Robert muttered to his father, 'If I knew the Moorish for "remember your wife and kids" I'd sing that back to him.'

  Orm grinned, tolerant. 'I wouldn't worry. She's a city girl. I don't think she has any interest in camel-drivers. He's just flirting, and so is she. Besides, shouldn't you put such things out of your head? Jealousy is a Christian sin, I imagine. As is lust.'

  'Most things are,' Robert conceded gloomily.

  In all this business of borders and tolls and taifas, Robert was learning, to his surprise, that there was more than one Moorish country here in Spain. He had imagined that all of Islam would be united like one vast army, without individual faces or minds, under the orders of the caliph in Baghdad.

  In fact the Muslims were diverse peoples. Even the armies who had originally invaded Gothic Spain three hundred years ago – whom the Christians called Moors, imagining they came from the old Roman province of Mauretania – had not all been Arabic. The leaders had been Arab, yes, but they had been outnumbered by their Berber warriors, who came from the harsh lands of the Maghrib just to the south across the Pillars of Hercules. Many of the Berbers' descendants were prone to complain, even fifteen or twenty generations later, how they had been tricked by the Arabs when it came to parcelling up the old Gothic kingdom.

  And, Robert learned, Muslims went to war with each other, as well as with Christians.

  It had been fifty years since a single ruler, in Cordoba, had controlled all the Muslim lands in Spain. That ruler, remarkably, had been a second caliph, independent of the one in faraway Baghdad. 'It is as if,' Sihtric said, 'a city like Paris or York hosted a second pope of its own.'

  When the caliphate fell, al-Andalus splintered into taifas – so many of these little statelets that nobody had been able to count them; there may have been three dozen. But as is the way of politics and war the taifas had squabbled among themselves like fish in a pond, eating each other up until there were only half a dozen left.

  As they drove steadily south the land became ever starker, drier, dustier, baked in the heat. And yet the irrigation channels brought green life to the land in great broad strips. Sihtric said that 'water courts' sitting in the towns supervised the upkeep of the irrigation systems, which were a communal treasure. The land actually seemed richer than England, where the peasants toiled with heavy ploughs. But then this land was not as God had designed it but as people had made it, people who had walked out of deserts, who knew how to extract life from the slightest drop of moisture.

  In one place where they stopped for the night, Marwam paid a farmer a few coins for them to pitch their blankets under the shade of fruit trees. Robert had never seen such fruit, heavy and bright. They were oranges, Moraima told him, an Arabic name for a fruit brought here by the Moors. She clambered up a trunk and picked a couple of samples, and showed him how to remove the thick peel. When he dug in his thumbs he squirted her with zest, and when he bit into the fat segments, juice gushed out and rolled down his chin. The orange was bitter, making his tongue curl, but the flavour was like light in his mouth.

  So they ate their oranges, their faces plastered with sticky juice and zest, laughing at each other. It was a simple, wordless moment between the two of them which even the faithless camel driver couldn't spoil.

  V

  At last the party came to Cordoba.

  Approaching the walled kernel of the city, they passed through a hinterland of cultivated country. Farthest out estates sprawled, astonishingly green, with hanging gardens and citrus groves crowding the river banks, and with buildings like blocky jewels shining in the sun. These estates were like the villas of the long-gone Romans, Sihtric said. He called them munyas, country houses.

  Then the old roads brought them through suburbs of the city itself, communities of mud-brick houses that jostled by the road. Sihtric said that the city had long outgrown its Roman walls, and many of its necessary functions had been transplanted out here: residential areas, markets, bathhouses, industry, gardens. Most of the buildings inside the city walls were official, such as palaces, a chancery, the mints, prisons.

  But the place had seen better days. The travellers passed burned-out buildings, and even some grand estates looked abandoned. These wrecks were nothing to do with the Christian armies but were scars of the wars between Muslims. Cordoba was no longer a capital of anything, not even of its own destiny, for it had been absorbed into the rule of a taifa run out of another Moorish city called Seville.

  As they neared the city, vendors of water sacks, meat on sticks, and even bits of sparkling jewellery crowded around the travellers. Beggars too pushed forward, holding up the stumps of severed arms, or stretching open hideous wounds on their faces. Old soldiers, perhaps, or refugees from the cities the Christians had occupied to the north.

  At last Cordoba itself loomed before them, a walled forest of minarets and domes and cupolas. They approached a gate in the walls, one of seven. Traffic streamed through it, pedestrians, horses, mules, the camels towering over the rest.

  Soldiers stood by the gate, languid. Robert studied them. They wore quilted jackets over long mail coats, and round helmets, and they had mail masks they could pull up over their faces. They carried shields of wood, long spears, stabbing swords and complicated-looking bows. Some of them carried crossbows, which Ibn Hafsun said were of a design that dated back to the Romans. It seemed odd to Robert to see a soldier without Christ's cross emblazoned anywhere on his costume.

  They lodged their animals at a stable, and left instructions for their goods to be brought after them. Robert was surprised to find slaves working here; there weren't many slaves in England.

  Then they walked into the crowded city itself, Sihtric leading the way. The streets were so narrow that in places two people couldn't pass without brushing, and woven into a network of dead ends and double-backs so dense that Robert was soon lost. His nose was filled with the spicy scents of unfamiliar cooking, and his ears rang with the muezzin cries that billowed out from the towers of the city mosques. Marwam had already turned back, to Robert's relief, but the faces crowding around him were like a hundred Marwams, dark, sharp, their alien language studded with bits of Latin.

  They passed an arched gateway in a wall, lobed, delicately shaped of soft stone and covered with intricate carvings. Robert's gaze was led through the arch from the shadow of the street into a sunlit courtyard, where a fountain bubbled in a square garden of tiles and green plants. There was nothing like this in Robert's England, a place of gloomy fortified towns and brooding Norman keeps, nothing like this garden full of water and sunlight. It was like looking through a hole in the wall of the world, a glimpse of paradise.

  'This is how we do things here,' Moraima said, watching him. 'Our gardens are the hearts of our homes. Our wealth, poured into beauty for those whom we love to enjoy. Is it different where you live?'

  He saw the light of the secret garden reflected in her deep eyes, as if they too were doorways he might enter.

  Ibn Hafsun nudged Orm and sniggered, and the girl laughed, and the moment was lost.

  VI

  They spent a day resting.

  Robert, unable to sleep late for the heat,
was up at dawn. He went walking at random.

  The city was awake before he was, the streets bustling, the markets and mosques busy in the blue-grey light, the muleteers driving their beasts out of the city gates. As he walked he gradually got used to the layout of streets. Moorish houses were knots of buildings gathered around a courtyard, to be reached by narrowing paths that budded off wider highways. There was a logic to it, but it wasn't the straight-line logic of a Roman city like London; here the streets branched like the limbs of a tree, leading to endless dead-ends. The people weren't like English people either. They were a mixed-up sort, the result of generations of intermarriage between the invaders and the old Gothic peoples. Not everybody was Muslim either; there were Christians here, and many Jews.

  The city nestled within the circling safety of its old Roman walls, which ran down to a river where waterwheels turned languidly, and which was still spanned by a stout Roman bridge. The city's heart was full of grand buildings, finely tiled, intricately adorned with carved stone and moulded plaster. The greatest building of all was a vast mosque that sprawled in its own compound close to the river: a temple to a god who was not God, a firm Islamic statement planted proudly in a Roman city. There was a sense of wealth here, Robert thought, of care, of intensive labour over every detail. And yet it was an architecture born of war. The buildings had stout fortress-like walls and towers and gateways, but these warlike structures were made elegant by their proportions, and the fine embellishment of fretwork and stucco and inscription.

  As the day wore on he learned the cycle of the city. Because of the heat and the light the very rhythm of life here was quite different from any English city. As noon approached the people retreated to the shade of their homes, windows closed and shutters drawn. Even the animals grew quiet, as if the whole city slept beneath a shroud of dense, dusty orange air. But as evening approached and the first whispers of coolness arrived, the city began to stir once more. The street lights were lit, and the city came alive as a firmament of light and movement, of music and laughter.

  Robert was entranced.

  On the second morning they made their way to Sihtric's small town house. Robert's heart quickened when Moraima joined them.

  Sihtric served them watered wine, and announced that later in the day he would introduce Orm to his sponsor, one Ahmed Ibn Tufayl, a vizier of the emir of the taifa which now owned Cordoba. 'When he heard you were coming, Orm, the vizier demanded I bring you to him. The caliphs always saw off the Vikings; this wasn't Alfred's England, weak, backward and divided, and there are few Vikings here. So you're an object of curiosity!'

  'I hope I don't disappoint,' Orm growled ungraciously. In the bright Spanish sunlight he was massive, heavy, somehow dark, Robert thought. He wasn't comfortable here. And his head probably hurt from the monkish wine he and Sihtric had consumed the night before. Orm said to Robert, 'Don't you notice anything different about me today?'

  'By God's eyes. You cut your hair.'

  He stroked his chin. 'Look, a good shave too. And I had a bath.'

  Robert was genuinely shocked. 'You didn't.'

  'I went to one of those bathhouses the Moors have. Quite pleasant it was, if you can put up with smelling like an East Roman whore.'

  Ibn Hafsun smiled. 'You have to make yourself presentable to meet a Muslim ruler. Clean clothes, a wash. The envoys of the Christian kings, even of the Pope, have always known this. Of course Christians aren't quite as in awe of the Moors as they were in my father's day.'

  Moraima, serving more wine, passed Robert. 'I'm glad you haven't bathed. I quite like the way Christians smell.' And with a fleeting, luring smile, she turned away.

  Sihtric lectured them about Cordoba's magnificence. 'At its peak, only a generation ago, it was the greatest city in the west. Why, its population even matched Constantinople. Five hundred mosques. Three hundred bathhouses. Fifty hospitals. Do you even know what a "hospital" is, young Robert?

  'And the greatest library in all the world, it is said, flourished here in Cordoba, under the caliphs. It all started when the East Roman emperor sent the caliph a copy of a pharmacology text by Dioscorides – have you heard of him? It was like dropping a bit of hot iron into a pan of water. Scholarship boiled in al-Andalus…'

  The caliphs, rich and at peace, embraced learning as an emblem of power and sophistication. And they were much better placed to do so than western Christendom, for they had access to the surviving works of antiquity. Employing legions of copyists and translators, the Moorish scholars merged Greek and Roman learning with what their cousins in Damascus and Baghdad had acquired from the Persians, and they built on what they learned. The result was a flowering in astronomy and physics, medicine and philosophy.

  Sihtric said, 'The library itself grew to four hundred thousand books. The catalogue alone ran to forty-four volumes! This was at a time when the kings of England were entirely illiterate. But when the caliphate fell the library was broken up. How I wish I had been born a generation earlier. But there are still books milling around the city, as if released into the wild. It is my skill at tracking the books down as much as my learning that makes me so useful to Ibn Tufayl, I think…'

  Sihtric was a man of contradictions. For all his admiration of Cordoba's Moorish achievements, he was keen to play up its deeper Roman origins.

  'All of western Europe is the same. All of us dwelling in the vast ruins of the empire, four centuries after some German brute pushed aside the last boy-emperor from his throne. Did you know that the philosopher Seneca came from this very town? And the Emperor Hadrian himself, who made his mark on Britain as you know very well, Orm, came from the Spanish city the Roman called Italica, which is now the capital of our local taifa, Ishbiliya, or Seville…'

  As he droned on, Moraima, without warning, grabbed Robert's hand, held her finger to her lips and hauled him out of the room. 'Come on. By the time they notice we've gone we'll be far away.'

  Robert was thrilled to be off on an illicit adventure with Moraima – to be alone with her at last, with no fathers or lusty camel-drivers in the way. But a lingering sense of duty prompted him to say, 'We have to see this vizier-'

  'I'll get you to the palace in time. I thought you were a warrior – you' re very timid. Come on.'

  So they set off, holding hands, giggling and half-running like children.

  She led him to a market, crowded and noisy, where stalls were piled high with tiles and bowls, with fine velvets and felts and silks. Moraima said that Cordoban shoes and carpets and paper were famous throughout the Muslim world. There were exotic imports to be found too: the fur of walrus and polar bears from Scandinavia, carved ivory and gold trinkets from Africa, silk, spices and jewellery from the east, even fine wool from England. One stall had a pile of fruit that Moraima had to name for him, save for the oranges: lemons, limes, bananas, pomegranates, watermelons, artichokes. Not even the Norman kings, Robert imagined, ate such exotic stuff as this.

  Moraima said, 'They say Cordoba is more like Africa than Europe. That Paris is not like this, or London.'

  'Africa starts at the Pyrenees,' Robert said, echoing his father.

  'I've never travelled beyond the Pyrenees. I'd love to see London. Or York.'

  'I've seen those places, and more.'

  'You're lucky.'

  He shrugged. 'My mother died when I was small. I go where my father goes. He's a soldier. Somebody's always rebelling, and he goes to sort it out.'

  'And London-'

  'Big. Dirty. Crowded. A cathedral like a big black pile. The Normans are building an immense fort in the corner of the old Roman walls. And York is a midden. It never recovered from the Normans' harrying twenty years ago.'

  "'Harrying"? What does that mean?'

  'Ask my father. He was there.'

  But that wounded country seemed far from this light-filled city, very far and somehow unreal. 'You know, you aren't much like your father,' he said.

  'How so?'

  'You seem full of…'
He sought the right word. 'Joy. Your father doesn't seem joyful at all.'

  Moraima shrugged. 'He admires the city, the Moors' accomplishments. He relishes the learning. But he despises it at the same time. I think he has to despise it, for it is not Christian.'

  'And yet he stays here,' said Robert. 'Why? For you?'

  'Yes, for me.' But she said this without emotion. 'And he has his projects. Something to do with the library, the books. History.'

  'All for the vizier?'

  'Paid for by the vizier, yes, but not all for him.'

  'What projects, then?'

  'He doesn't tell me.' That seemed to embarrass her, and she said, 'What about your father? Why is he here?'

  Robert sighed. 'Something to do with your father, and what he's up to. Though how a bit of book-reading in faraway Spain can affect him I don't know.' He looked at her. 'Moraima – we keep talking about them.'

  She said coyly, 'So what do you want to talk about?'

  He dared to say, 'We could start with the way your eyes match the blue of the sky.'

  She gasped, and he saw he'd pleased her. 'You'd like our poetry,' she said, recovering quickly. 'It's full of lines like that. Eyes like stars and breasts like billowing clouds-'

  'Maybe I should read you some,' he said.

  But she wasn't to be snared so easily. 'Well, how about the colour of the vizier's eyes when we turn up at his palace late? Come on!' And she turned and ran through the market crowds.

  Utterly lost in the heart of the city, he had no choice but to follow.

  VII

  Robert and Moraima found their fathers at the gate in the city walls. Ibn Hafsun the muwallad stood by with horses.

  Sihtric was impatient, fretting. 'Where have you been? You do not keep the vizier of an emir waiting.'

  'Ibn Tufayl will understand,' Moraima said, unconcerned.

  Sihtric fumed, but his anxiety to be away got the better of him. They mounted their horses and rode out into the dust of the country.

 

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