Greek Fire blazed in Sophia's brain.
She screamed, "Do not call him a b.a.s.t.a.r.d!"
"Sophia!" said Simon wonderingly. "Thank you!"
She stood trembling, but almost as soon as the words flew from her mouth, the fit of rage pa.s.sed.
_I must be going mad._
But she had done no harm. She seemed to have made things better.
"Forgive me, Count." Lorenzo laid the crossbow on the bed. "It was rude to call you that. But you did ruin our hope of victory today. Daoud had the battle won. He almost had his hands on your b.l.o.o.d.y Charles d'Anjou, when you charged out of the hills with your d.a.m.ned army. And now the king I served for twenty years and my good friend are both dead." He rubbed the back of his hand across his eyes. "That was hard, Count. Very hard."
_So it was Simon's charge that turned the battle_, Sophia thought. _And it was because of me that he entered this war._ Her grief grew heavier still.
"You may hold those things against me," said Simon, "and I might hold against you the deaths of John and Philip, whom I dedicated my life to protecting."
Listening to that grave, quiet voice, Sophia realized that Simon no longer seemed young to her. It was as if he had aged many years since she had seen him last.
As long as she had known him, she had thought of him as a boy. And yet, from what she was hearing, if Charles d'Anjou was now king of southern Italy and Sicily, it was to Simon that he owed the crown.
"But I know who really killed the Tartars," Simon went on. "It was Charles, Count Charles, now King Charles, who no more wants to make war on Islam than your friend Daoud did. Charles kept the Tartars with himself and away from King Louis, and he let them go out on the field while the battle was raging, no doubt hoping they would die."
Lorenzo frowned. "You mean Charles used me to get rid of the Tartars?"
Simon nodded. "He could not have known it would be you, but he made sure they would be in harm's way. Charles is very good at using people. My mother warned me about him long before I let him persuade me to come to Italy to guard the Tartars, but I did not listen. But now, how are we going to get all of you safely out of Benevento?"
He kept coming back to that, Sophia thought. He seemed determined to save them from Charles d'Anjou's vengeance.
"We may still have the wagon I hid out in the forest," Lorenzo said.
"And if you truly mean to help us, you might appropriate a horse or two.
There are many horses hereabouts whose owners will never need them again."
"I can write you a genuine safe-conduct that will get you past Charles's officials and agents," Simon said. "If you travel quickly enough, you may get ahead of them into territory still friendly to you. There may be no army left to oppose Charles, but it will take him some time to get control of all the territory he has won. Where might you go?"
Sophia took Rachel's hand again, and they sat on the bed. Remembering that she and Daoud had shared this bed last night, Sophia felt the heaped stones of sorrow weigh heavier still.
_I will never hold him again._
To distract herself from her pain, she tried to listen to what people around her were saying.
"To Palermo first," said Lorenzo decisively. "At a time like this, with the king gone, every family must fend for itself. I want to get to mine at once." He turned to Rachel, and his mustache stretched in one of the smiles Sophia had seen all too rarely. "My wife, Fiorela, and I would be honored to have you as a member of our family, Rachel."
Rachel gave a little gasp. "Truly?"
"Truly. I have been wanting to propose it for a long time."
Again Sophia thanked G.o.d for Lorenzo. She almost wished he would offer to take her into his family too.
Simon stared at Lorenzo. "You are--were--an official at Manfred's court, and your wife's name is Fiorela?"
Lorenzo frowned. "Yes, Count. What of it?"
Simon's interest puzzled Sophia. Could there be some connection between him and Lorenzo?
"We must speak more about her later." Simon flexed his mail-clad arms.
"It will not be safe for you to try to leave Benevento until morning. I will see to it that my men guard this house from the looters till then.
They will not, of course, know who is in here with me. Meanwhile, you all had better sleep, if you can."
Weary and broken by sorrow though she was, Sophia knew that to try to lie down in the dark would mean nothing but hours of suffering. She would sleep only when she fainted from exhaustion. And she dreaded the agony she would feel when she woke again and remembered what had happened this day.
Tilia cleared her throat politely. "Your Signory, it will be hard to sleep in the same room with dead bodies."
Simon frowned. "Dead bodies?"
"Well--I hope you will not hold it against myself and the cardinal--but besides Sordello here, there are two of his henchmen in the room we have been occupying."
"Also dead?"
"Also dead. They were trying to rob us."
Now Sophia remembered that Sordello had brought two Venetians with him, and she remembered the barks and growls that had come up through the floorboards while she was alone with Sordello. What had happened down there between Ugolini and Tilia and Sordello's men? And Scipio?
Sophia looked at Tilia and noticed that she wore a small smile of satisfaction and was fingering her jeweled pectoral cross.
_I need not worry about Tilia_, she thought grimly.
Simon sighed. "There must be a bas.e.m.e.nt in this house, a root cellar, something of the kind. Lorenzo, you and I will find a place to take the bodies."
The room grew cold with Sophia and Rachel alone in it, and Sophia put more logs on the fire, thankful that the merchant who had hurriedly vacated this place had left plenty of wood. She lay down in the big bed beside Rachel.
Hesitantly, Rachel told Sophia that she, with Friar Mathieu, had been present at Daoud's death. She showed Sophia the little leather capsule, and Sophia, remembering the many times she had seen it around Daoud's neck, broke into a fresh storm of weeping.
Rachel held it out to her. "I think perhaps you should be the one to have it."
"No. He gave it to you." Sophia wiped her eyes, drew out the locket and opened it, looked sadly at the meaningless tracery of lines on its rock-crystal surface, barely visible in the light from the low fire.
"This locket is what he gave me. It seems the magic in it died with him, but it is a precious keepsake." She remembered that she had been looking at the locket when Sordello tried to kill Simon. Why had he tried to do that? It made no sense, but because of it she had killed Sordello, and of that she was glad. She had avenged Daoud.
Desperately needing to know every detail of Daoud's death, Sophia questioned Rachel until, in the middle of a sentence, the girl fell asleep.
Sophia lay wide awake in the dark, crying silently. Lying there was h.e.l.l, as she had expected it would be. After what seemed like hours, the fire on the hearth died. She got up and piled three bed carpets over Rachel.
She wrapped herself in her winter cloak and slipped out of the room.
Going, she knew not where, but unable to remain still. Wanting only to distract herself from her pain with a little movement.
She went down the stairs, pa.s.sing the silent second-floor room were Ugolini and Tilia lay. She heard men's voices from a room on the ground floor.