Adams, Robert - Castaways in Time 03 - Of Quests and Kings

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PROLOGUE
The big, burly man in halt-armor and plumed, open-faced net strolled, seemingly aimlessly, along
the top of the outer wall of the city, glancing from time to time at the massive bombards ranged
at odd intervals. Each of the archaic pieces was covered with waxed tarpaulins against the
frequent misty drizzles, and under them, thick, tarred tompions sealed the gaping muzzles, while
waxed plugs stopped the touchholes atop the breeches. Wooden sheds thrown up on either side of
each bombard held the multitudinous items of supplies and equipment needed to maintain, serve, and
clean the antique weapons. Beyond range of the bombards' hellacious recoils stood stacks of four
to five of the granite balls which were the heaviest things that the weak-walled tubes would
throw, even charged with the weak serpentine powder that had to be mixed on the spot to the
individual requirements of each bombard.
The big armored man. Captain Timoteo, il Duce di Bolgia, could not imagine just what had gone
through the brain—admittedly, a quite often addled brain—of King Tamhas FitzGerald, his erstwhile
employer. The man had had the foresight to mount decent, modern guns that were strong enough to be
charged with corned powder and would accurately throw iron ball and shell, grape, langrage, or
what-have-you farther than all but the very largest of the
bombards, could be reloaded in much less time, and could be easily moved about the walls to the
spots of most immediate need; but these guns all were mounted on the landward approaches of the
fortified city of Tamhas'burh— the walls and other strong points overlooking the river and
anchorages were armed with nothing of any size better or newer than these abominations of world-
heavy, barely manageable relics.
Now true, a single massive stone ball from any one of them would go far to crack like a pigeon egg
the oaken ribs of even the biggest and best-found ship, but in order for that to take place, the
ship would have to be in just the right place at just the right time, a happenstance that was seen
very, very infrequently in warfare. Had the ancient tubes been more maneuverable and faster to
clean and recharge, they might have been some bare protection against a river packed with ships as
thickly as a barrel with Lenten herrings.
But such was not the case. There was no slightest degree of uniformity to these guns—each of them
took a different size of stone ball, a different charge of powdery serpentine mixed especially for
it, on the spot, by a gunmaster who knew no other gun but the one and was responsible for no
other, and each had its own particular and often peculiar quirks with regard to cleaning or
charging, recharging or laying. Moreover, the old bombards could be more dangerous to their crews
and to those round about than they were to those at whom they chanced to be aimed. Twice, now,
since the siege had commenced, bombards still mounted on landward walls had burst, killing their
entire crews, setting off mixed powder and maiming men standing far down the stretches of walls
with shards or chunks of bronze or iron. Timoteo was of the firm opinion that all of the bombards
should long since have been rendered into something useful, such as bells, plowshares, or brass
pisspots.
But Righ T&mhas would not hear of gracefully retiring even a single bombard for stupidly emotional
reasons. He frequently pointed out that such and such a gun—he had pet names for each of more than
twoscore of the things— had had a part in such and such a "great triumph" over such and such foes
during the "illustrious reign" of his great-great-grandfather and gave such inanities as the firm
reasons why the venerable piece could not be replaced with a new tube that would throw iron safely
for a much greater distance, use less powder, foul less thickly and frequently, be traversed when
need be, fire faster than a couple of shots per hour, and imperil less the lives and well-being of
those who served it and served around it.
Pragmatic and more than a little cynical, il Duce di Bolgia had never been able to fathom or
relate to the thinking processes of those who allowed their emotions to make their decisions for
them. His brother, Robert, was and had always been far the better at doing any necc handling of
such types; moreover, the Righ had taken a liking to the younger of the brothers, and so Timoteo
had left the management of the none-too-bright, self-deluded kinglet to Roberto and to Sir Ugo
D'Orsini, who had traveled with the di Bolgia condotta from Palermo.
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Aside from his ongoing difficulties with the temperamental, often childish, but powerful and
unbelievably arrogant pocket king, Righ Tamhas de FitzGerald—whose "kingdom," even at the most far-
flung boundaries claimed by him and his cousin-advisers, was not quite so large as the Duchy of
Bolgia, and less than half the size of the Duchy of D'Este—Timoteo thought that he could almost
come to like this kind of warfare, this variety of investment and siege.
He had lost a bare handful of men from his own condotta, and there had been perhaps that many more
lost from the Ifriqan condotta of Sir Alariq al-lswid, and almost all of them had fallen in the
sally that had convinced the Ard-righ. Brian VIII, that another frontal assault against
Tamhas'burh would cost more than he cared to pay. After that, with other fish to fry, the Ard-Righ
had wisely marched his army off, leaving his trains to continue a passive investment of
Tamhas'burh.
Upon the withdrawal of the Ard-Righ's main force, Righ Tamhas had been hot to lead a sally-forth
against the siege lines to capture all the guns and engines, butcher the gunners and engineers,
and sack the camps, but after a few nights of quiet, professional reconnaissances led by Timoteo
and Sir Alariq, Sir Roberto and Sir Ugo had had to convince the hot-blooded, thick-headed monarch
that Brian the Burly had left behind more than enough quality soldiers to make any sally a risky
to bloody business, beyond any safe capability of the much-shrunken Royal Army of Munster.
Tamhas had railed and shouted and stomped up and down the length of the audience chamber, thrown a
cathedra chair through a window, snapped the etched and inletted blade of a gold-hilted dress
dagger by trying to drive it into the top of a polished oaken table. As he stared at the broken
bauble, the big, muscular man began to cry and moan of how the Holy See and its chosen captain, di
Bolgia, had ruined him and Munster, driving loyal bonaghts and galloglaiches and even noble
FitzGerald kinsmen away from their loving sovran, leaving him and Munster now defenseless except
for craven, money-grubbing oversea mercenaries, with no true loyalty of bravery in them not
reckoned in grams of gold and ounces of silver. On hearing this last, it was only Sir Ugo's firm
grip on his thick, solid upper arm that kept Sir Roberto from stalking out unbidden.
But at length, while the Righ moaned and sobbed on with his litany of his totally undeserved
abuses at the hands of those he had trusted and those who had been sent to aid him. Sir Roberto
regained enough self-control to step forward and say, "Your majesty, the di Bolgia condotta and
that of Sir Alariq al-lswid were sent here to hold this city, to try to make a modem army of the
Munster forces, also, but first and foremost to keep open this port. My illustrious brother. Sir
Alariq, and Le Chevalier Marc have unanimously agreed that the city cannot be held, the port
cannot be kept open, if the best of the now available forces are frittered away in open assault on
entrenched foemen for the possible capture of a few guns, trebuchets, and catapults and a bit of
common camp loot.
"However, these strictures apply only to the companies not to noble-born individuals. If your
majesty and his councillors and his gentlemen-at-arms wish to ride out against the siege lines,
both Sir Ugo and I will ride behind your banner."
Righ Tamhas, after using his long fingers to blow mucus from his nostrils onto the Persian carpet,
snuffled and looked up. "And your brother and that blackamoor, what will they do. Sir Roberto?"
The younger di Bolgia shrugged. "Most likely they will bar the city gates behind us, observe the
combat from the walls, let any survivors back in and haggle with the victors for the return of any
wounded, work out ransoms, and buy noble bodies back for honorable, Christian interments."
The Righ snuffled once again, used a silken sleeve to wipe his nose, and nodded profoundly. "I
knew that I had chosen aright. Sir Robert, Sir Ugo, I knew from first meeting that you two, alone
of all the pack of new-model cravens who fight what little they do only for specie, were both good
old-fashioned knights who valued your honor above all else in this world. I will be most happy to
have you both ride out in my warband, but first I must meet with my full council. You will be
summoned. You have my leave to now depart. May our Savior bless and keep you both."
Once some hundreds of yards distant from the palace. Sir Ugo laid hold to Sir Roberto's bridle arm
and nearly jerked the stocky man out of the saddle. "What the bloody hell do you think you're up
to, man? You may be as deluded as that so-called king is into thinking that you're still living
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two or three hundred years ago, but not me, not the third son of Geraldo D'Orsini. I've got far
better things to do with my life than toss it away in the most senseless of a harebrained pocket
king's schemes. Ride out to your death with those mad FitzGeralds if that is your desire, but ride
without me!"
Roberto just grinned. "Simmer down, Ugo, simmer down. Nobody's going to ride anywhere. Haven't
you yet taken the true measure of that precious pack of FitzGerald cousins who were introduced to
us as the Royal Council? Oh. yes, they every one talk and rant just as bloodthirstily as does
their royal relative, but one and all, their hands are every bit as soft as my mistress's bottom.
I have no doubt that they'd make good poisoners, and one or two of them might even be able to
screw up the gumption to thrust a dagger in a man's back, but no one of them is in any manner of
means a soldier. Recall, if you will, the exact way in which I phrased my offer of military
service to Sniffing Tamhas: 'If your majesty and his concillors and his gentlemen-at-arms wish to
ride out ..." and so on. Did you note the suddenly milk-pale faces on those three mothers'
mistakes. Ugo? I did, and I also saw the 'secret signal' that they gave Tamhas just before he
dismissed us and announced an urgent meeting of the full council."
Sir Ugo dropped his hand from Roberto's arm and sat back in his saddle. "By the dusty pecker of
Christ's ass-colt, di Bolgia. you're as devious'as a cardinal. With any luck, you'll split that
royal dolt away from his council as cleanly as ... God's Wounds, if you and your brother had
chosen the church instead of war . . . who knows?
"But once they're all sacked or worse, what then. Roberto? That man is about as capable of dealing
with the affairs of what little is now left of his kingdom as is this gelding I ride today, and
what noblemen are there about who are not related to him some way or anoth—? But . . . but. of
course! And just who dreamed all this up, you or il Duct?"
"Actually." drawled Roberto, "the germ of the plan came from Le Chevalier. He is a shrewd judge of
the weak he descended, a sleekly groomed and richly accoutered seem. It was either somehow get
firm control of this easily swayed kinglet ... or do away with him entirely, only to see him
succeeded by yet another of his ilk who might have been even more difficult and intransigient.
"This way, we two are just now the very jewels of Tamhas's bloodshot eye; while, shortly, he will
have damnedall his councillors for cowards and be very much in need of solace and sage counsel by
men he feels are alike to him and so can be implicitly trusted to lead him in the pursuit of old-
fashioned honor."
Sir Ugo slapped the reins languidly on his mount's neck and tapped his heels gently against the
barrel to get moving once more, then he chuckled and shook his head. "So, Tamhas will rule the
city, we will rule Tamhas, and . . . who will rule us. Roberto? Does His Grace di Rezzi, the
legate, know anything concerning any of this?"
Sir Roberto shrugged. "I didn't tell him. I've only seen the man once, after all. Whether others
have or will or haven't or won't is none of my purely personal affair, Ugo. As to who will rule
us, I don't know about you. but my loyalties will lie just where they always have lain: with His
Grace my brother, and the welfare of his company. You will find as has many another that we di
Bolgias cleave closely one to the other, for there are but the two of us against a hard and often
a cruel world."
After his early-morning wall-walk, the Duce di Bolgia returned to his small but comfortable
mansion, where his serving men helped him to disarm and redress in less military and far more
ornate clothing. In the courtyard, as he descended, a sleekly groomed and richly accoutered barb
awaited him. stamping and prancing and tossing her small, neat head. At a brisk walk, trailed
closely by his bannerman, his squires, and some of the axmen of his personal guard, the eldest of
the di Bolgias wound his way through the already bustling streets of the city to the mansion of
the Papal Legate, Giosue di Rezzi, acting Archbishop of Munster.
il Duce could not say that he liked di Rezzi—his employer in residence and in fact. The rigid old
man was flinty of nature, and the irreverent, thoroughly practical, outspoken, and not overly
moral di Bolgia steel right often struck sparks off that flint. For all of that, the condottiere
thoroughly respected the legate, for the man—unlike many another representative of the clergy di
Bolgia had met on occasions too numerous to count—said just what he thought, said it out in words
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any man could understand, and never, so far, had tried to honey-coat criticisms of di Bolgia or
anyone else. So. having this degree of marked respect for the cleric, il Duce felt an obligation
to apprise him of just what he and his brother and the other military leaders were about with
regard to their figurehead employer, King Tamhas di FitzGerald.
He was ushered into the legate's bedchamber, where the air was hot and thickly cloyed with the
competing scents of burning incense and herbs piled upon coals of the half-dozen braziers near the
huge bed. When he once had dropped to one knee and kissed the ring, the legate signed a servant to
bring a chair for him, signing another to bring wine for the noble guest.
His eyes swollen and wet-looking, speaking nasally, while sneezing and coughing often, the old man
got directly to a point. "Your grace di Bolgia, yesterday afternoon. King Tamhas saw fit to
dissolve his Royal Council, having three of his closest advisers hustled into an inner courtyard
and there beheaded by members of the FitzGerald Guards. Two others of them were hanged last night,
and it is my understanding that the rest currently languish in the warren of cells and foul dens
under the royal residence.
"Now, while a spate of interfamilial violence is far from uncommon among these primitives here in
Irland, I think me that I detect the fine Italian touch in all of this barbarity just past. The
proper and more usual pattern would have been for the king to chose new advisers from among others
of his kin. Instead, he has named his latest councillors to be none other than Sir Roberto di
Bolgia, Sir Ugo d'Orsini, Your Grace, himself, le Chevalier Marc Marcel de Montjoie dc Vires, and
one solitary FitzGerald, a guardsman named Sean something or other, who will be about as
outclassed on such a council as a lapdog among as many boarhounds.
"Your Grace di Bolgia, I demand to know just what chicanery you and your brother and the rest are
perpetrating here against the King and the Kingdom of Munster."
The servant padded in with a ewer of wine, a goblet, and a small legged silver tray. When he had
poured and tasted and departed, di Bolgia took a long draught, smiled, and said, "Your Grace di
Rezzi, to tell you of these things was the very reason I called upon you so early. I should have
known that such information would already have been imparted to you by others, of course, for Your
Grace is ever a well-informed man."
"Your Grace di Bolgia should be aware by now that flattery will accomplish him nothing but
suspicion from me," snapped di Rezzi. "Now get on with it man. Just what are you up to?"
Timoteo shook his head. "No flattery was intended. Your Grace di Rezzi, I but stated established
fact. Under the circumstances, with the city and port besieged—albeit mildly so—the king dimwitted
and most ill-reded, but a true, old-time fire-eater to suicidal extremes, i was afforded but three
options, namely: to take you and your people aboard with me and mine and sail away, forfeiting the
city and port and all to the Ard-Righ (whenever he got back to take it); to arrange the quiet
demise of King Tamhas and maybe still be saddled with a royal FitzGerald nincompoop in his
successor; or to arrange to get rid of that sycophantic so-called Royal Council and give the poor
royal ninny advisers who could and would cool down his hot head and help him to keep the city and
port, which seems so important to the Holy See. This lastmost option we have now accomplished.
Your Grace di Rezzi."
Di Rezzi stared at Timoteo over slender, steepled fingers and asked, "And had this . . . this
scheme not blossomed as it did, what would Your Grace then have done, pray tell?"
Timoteo spoke bluntly. "Then Tamhas would have been dead inside a week, of course. Your Grace. And
had we drawn yet another of his ilk for the new Righ of Munster, then I would have advised total
withdrawal from the city. port, and land."
"Hmmph!" grunted the ailing old man. "You're candid enough, aren't you. Your Grace di Bolgia? And
your morality leaves much to be desired—you cheerfully admit to planning that has resulted in the
deaths of at least five noble Irlandesi already, with who knows how many more yet to be done to
death, and to contemplating regicide and/or desertion of your trusting allies in their time of
direst need. What other dark sins lie upon your soul, eh? Besides corrupting a child-mistress, as
you have been doing for some time, that is?"
Timoteo laughed good-naturedly. "Your Grace di Rezzi. the lady Rosaleen is no child—she is a full
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fourteen years old and a widow."
"Do you intend marriage ... or merely sinful lust and dalliance with this poor, bereaved young
woman, then?" demanded the legate, his tones now that of a stern priest.
Timoteo laughed even more heartily. "Marry Rosaleen? Hardly, Your Grace. Bigamy is not one of my
vices, and I still have a wife living in Bolgia. Nor does Rosaleen want marriage, only . . . ahhh,
variety, shall we say, a lover who is neither an Irlandesi nor yet a distant relative. Our
relationship is purely physical, lustful, sinful, and enjoyable as all hell. Your Grace di Rezzi.
and I will be the first to admit to those unvarnished facts."
Dropping his hands to his lap. the old man pursed his lips and glared at his visitor in helpless
rage. "Is Your Grace aware that I have petitioned His Grace D'Este no less than three times to
have a certain intemperate, blasphemous, insubordinate, and unabashedly sinful condot-tiere
recalled and replaced with one who might be easier to control and might offer a better example to
his soldiers?"
Timoteo arched his eyebrows. "Really? And His Grace D'Este made reply?"
Looking as if he had but just bitten into something rotten, the Legate replied sourly, "I was
advised that said insubordinate sinner was, with all of his glaring faults, still the best of the
best for this work at hand and that I should temper my care for the good of his immortal soul with
the knowledge that just now Holy Mother the Church owns more need for the proven expertise of his
mind and the strength of his body."
Timoteo nodded once. "Yes, I had thought that I had proper measure of the man. His Grace D'Este
and I are much alike, when push comes to shove ... as, too, are Your Grace and I, would Your Grace
care to admit that which I am certain he knows aloud."
"IO humbly beseech our Savior that that not be so. Your Grace di Bolgia. Like all mortal men, I
harbor many faults, but I would hope that adultery, fornication, a mind freely set to cold-blooded
murder, debauchery, frequent blasphemy of the very crudest water, I would pray that these not be
included amongst them.
"I would suppose that were I to inform King Tamhas of the cruel trick you have played against him,
it would scarcely improve matters, so I shall keep my peace . . . for now. But I warn Your Grace,
do not make the cardinal error of pressing my forbearance too far.
"Now, leave me. I am ill, as Your Grace can see, and I own but little energy to do all that I must
do every day, ill or well. The very sight and sound of Your Grace sorely angers me. and that fire
of rage consumes energy better put to creative uses."
Timoteo il Duce di Bolgia felt a twinge of shame as he left his most recent "conference" with the
Papal Legate. The man was both old and infirm, and he had disliked that which he had had to
do—calculatedly enrage him, bait him, really—but it had ail been very necessary; now, at least, he
knew for certain that di Rezzi knew no more of the di Bolgia schemes than Timoteo wanted him to
know and so would be able to transmit no more than that to Palermo or Rome, and il Duce thought it
best for the nonce that only his version of the roiled, muddy politics of Munster and I Hand reach
the eyes of D'Este and his co-conspirators. Nor must anyone of power in the Church harbor, for a
while, even the barest flicker of suspicion that their hired great captain was most assiduously
frying some of his own fish on the same griddle as theirs.
Sir Sean FitzRobert of Desmonde sat across an elaborate chessboard of white and black marble
squares set in enameled bronze from his opponent, Le Chevalier Marc. Sir Sean was, like all of the
nobility and not a few of the commoners of Munster, a blood relation of Righ Tamhas Fitzgerald.
Careful scrutiny of many genealogical tables had affirmed to the di Bolgias, Marc, and Sir Ugo
that FitzRobert owned as much clear title to the blood-splattered throne of Munster as did any
living man other than the reigning monarch, and should it prove a necessity—as it very well might,
all things considered—to send King Tamhas to hell suddenly, a quick replacement of the water of
Sir Sean would be a most handy asset.
Unlike his cousin, the king, and far too many of their other male relatives. Sir Sean was more
than a muscular, dimwitted fire-eater. Not that he was not an accomplished warrior, too; he had
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had some years as a mercenary in Europe, some more in Great I Hand, across the Western Sea, and
had invaded England with the Irish contingent of Crusaders against King Arthur 111 Tudor, most
recently, being one of the few of that ill-starred lot who had come home with more than his life,
his sword, and his shirt.
For his class, country, and upbringing, he was not ill-educated. He spoke his native Irish, the
bastard dialect of antique Norman French of his cousin's court, modem French. Low German, Spanish,
Roman Italian, English, Latin, and a couple of Skraeling tongues from Great Irland. Also, although
he could write little more than his name, he could read Latin. French, and Irish well and Roman
and Spanish after a fashion: like all widely traveled mercenaries, he had a few words or phrases
in a vast diversity of other languages or dialects, but nothing approaching fluency in most of
them.
Nor was the thirtyish knight any more like to his sovran than survival in that royal figure's
court had made necessary. Even before he had been taken under the collective wing of the one
French and three Italian noblemen, he had washed once monthly without fail, be the season summer
or winter, spring or autumn. His squires brushed his shoulder-length, wavy, russet hair daily and
combed his beard and mustachios and dense eyebrows; moreover, and sometimes as often as twice the
week, he submitted to their minstrations with fine-comb, sitting near a smoking brazier so that
the lice and nits might more easily be cast to a certain death upon the coals.
He used scent, of course, as they all did. but his four new foreign mentors had convinced him that
he would not need nearly as much of the hellishly expensive stuff did he have his squires and
servants commence to regularly shake out and brush off his clothing and hang the garments in a
sunny, well-ventilated chamber, rather than in the close, noisome confines of a garderobe.
They could only make over FitzRobert to a certain extent, however: if they ground off too much of
the Munster-Irish barbarity, made him too clearly the mirror image of a civilized gentleman, there
might well be insurmountable difficulty in getting him crowned when the time came upon them, as
Timoteo and the others were certain it would, soon or late. Sir Sean was already considered to be
somewhat eccentric by the most of the Munster court, but as he owned his regard of Righ Tamhas, it
was generally excused as peculiarities acquired during his years of selling his sword in foreign
lands.
Of course. Sir Sean had been kept completely in the dark regarding his almost certain royal
destiny, for like all his kin he owned a loud, flapping tongue and an often indulged habit of
boasting. He was allowed to know only that he had been picked for membership on the Royal Council
because of his proven valor, his relatively open mind, his linguistic abilities, his reading
talents, and his possession of a reasoning mind. And he was bright; he knew enough to keep his
mouth firmly shut during council meetings unless pointedly asked for an opinion or comment.
Timoteo was very glad that the man had been on hand when needed, but still was of the opinion that
he could have been a great captain had he remained in Europe as a mercenary officer rather than
returning to Munster. At the Game of Battles, for instance, FitzRobert had but to see a new tactic
or strategy once to adapt it to his own play, right often with surprising improvements, too. It
was the same with sword work, also; within bare minutes of first using a personal attack or
defense movement, he or his brother. Sir Ugo or Le Chevalier, right often found themselves fed
back the identical maneuver by Sir Sean. And as the new-made commander of the FitzGerald Guard, he
did that which even the military experts from Italy had been unable to attain—he subjected the
troop of noble Irish bodyguards to and maintained them under firm discipline . . . with not one
desertion from their ranks to show for his efforts.
During their initial and exceedingly secret meeting in a tiny port at the foot of the Slieve Mish
Mountains (to Timoteo. who had seen real mountains, those called such in Irland were laughable
little molehills), Ard-Righ Brian, called "the Burly," had wrinkled his brows and opined, "We
suppose that since the addlepated Munsterians will no doubt insist on yet another Norman bastard
of the same FitzGerald ilk, with all that house's inbred faults, this FitzRobert is as good choice
as any of them; at least he has the reputation for being a gentleman of honor and martial prowess.
We must insist, however, that his predecessor be not just set aside but slain. The new-crowned
rign must immediately forgo claims to the disputed lands along the marches of Munster and send the
Star of Munster to Tara. Then and only then will we recognize him as Righ Sean, lift our siege,
and march our armies out of those undisputed parts of Munster that we now occupy.
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"As regards this other matter. Dux di Bolgia, we will have to see a fait accompli in Rome before
we even contemplate changing our present course in here in Eireann. Can Sicola, D'Este. and the
rest unseat these Spaniards and Moors and bring a sense of sanity and tightness back to the Roman
Papacy, with long-overdue redress and justice extended to us and to our sorely tried cousin King
Arthur of England, then . . . perhaps. We can just now give you no firmer answer to send to your
employers, we fear.
"Understand, Dux di Bolgia, and see to it that those who employ your services understand that we
would really prefer to see a Papacy in England, at York, or even. God willing, at Tara. here in
Eireann. Should this occur—and plans for it are jelling fast—Rome could but watch herself lose
hegemony over the most of northern and coastal Europe, Iceland. Greenland, and probably eke all of
the lands to the west north of the Spanish holdings.
"In such a case, a vastly weakened and impoverished Rome might well find its few remaining assets
taken over by either the newer, northern Papacy or Constantinople or both together—the precedent
is there; it has happened before; remember the Alexandrine Papacy of old.
"In point of fact. Dux di Bolgia, the plans of your employers may already have become a case of
too little and far too late to save the Roman Papacy to which we all were bom. Rome has played
favorites with a callous intensity for at least two hundred years now, alienating and deeply
angering whole kingdoms, not just their kings. Norway, Gottland, England, and now Eireann have
been slighted as if they were ill-favored and illegal offspring; while certain other kingdoms have
enjoyed the feast, others have been obliged to crouch in the rushes and snap at scraps and offal.
"The lands to the west make an excellent case in point, Dux di Bolgia. Certain men of Connachta,
Breifne, and Ui Neill were settled in parts of the northern continent there eight hundred years
ago; the Norse and Goths have been farther north on the same continent for at least six hundred
years, as have also small colonies of Scotti. Breton fishermen, and Welsh. Yet when the Genoan.
Columbo. and that Florentine, Vespucci, made landfall on certain southerly islands, to whom did
the Spanish-born Roman Pope give all rights to the lands he called new? Why to Spain, of course.
And of course also with the proviso that hefty chunks of all profits accrue to Rome. And those
profits have been healthy enough, God knows, and will be even more so if the next in the seemingly
endless stream of Spanish madmen ever is successful in conquering the Aztec Empire, as the Incas
on the southern continent were finally ground down, fifty years ago.
"It all might have been understood and forgiven had maners to the west been set aright when there
no longer sat a Spanish or Moorish Pope on St. Peter's seat, but no, Rome seems fundamentally
unable to, incapable of admitting publicly to any mistake or misjudgment, ever. To this very day,
any man not directly in the service of Spain or Portugal who dares to set foot upon any part of
the western lands is automatically excommunicated until he leaves, confesses, and does his
penance. This is not fair. Dux di Bolgia, it was not fair to begin, especially in the light of
clear evidence that Spanish claims were predated by five to six hundred years by other Christian
peoples, many of whom have done far more, incidentally, to win souls for Christ than have the
Spaniards, who seem mostly concerned with gaining bodies for servitude.
"If they succeed in their aims, we think that a good place for your employers to begin—after they
have fairly settled matters with us and with England, of course—would be to make meaningful rhyme
and reason out of the ownership of the western lands, admitting that others own earlier and better
claim to certain parts of them than do Spain and Portugal."
CHAPTER
THE FIRST
Sir Bass Foster, by the grace of God. Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Rutland, Markgraf von Velegrad.
Baron of Strath-tyne. Knight of the Garter (England), Knight of the Order of the Roten Adler (Holy
Roman Empire), and Lord Commander of the Horse of Arthur 111 Tudor, King of England and Wales, sat
a gentle, easy-gaited bay rounsey at the edge of an exercise field near the sprawling cavalry camp
near Norwich Castle, his seat, and watched his squadron of galloglaiches put through drill
procedures by their mostly Irish officers. The most of the galloglaiches themselves were not of
Irish antecedents, but rather hailed from the Western Isles of Scotland, and how these examples of
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the long-renowned and thoroughly fearsome fighters of the ilk had come to be the devoted personal
squadron of Bass Foster (who was, at heart, a gentle, peace-loving man) was a story in itself.*
*See Castaways in Time. Robert Adams, (Signet Books. 1982) and The Seven Magical Jewels of Ireland
(Signet Books. 1985).
Clad in his long-skirted buffcoat, trousers of doeskin and canvas, lawn shirt and jackboots, with
his tanned, scarred face shaded by the wide brim of a plumed hat. Sir Bass looked much like any of
his attending gentlemen, save only that he was a bit taller and heftier than the most of them; but
appearances can be deceiving, for Bass Foster was not a seventeenth-century English nobleman or
gentleman, as were they all. He was not even of their universe, much less of their world or time.
Years before that day on the drill field, a device spawned of a future technology had propelled
Bass and certain others of his world and time into this one, and their arrival had set in motion
currents that had wreaked significant changes in this world and would certainly continue to do so
for untold centuries yet to come. Mostly a misfit and seldom truly happy in the world of his
origin, Bass had, despite himself, fitted into this one like hand into gauntlet or sword into
sheath; depths almost unplumbed in his other-world life had been sounded and he was become a
consummate leader of fighting men, a very gifted cavalry tactician, and, more recently, a naval
figure of some note, as well. His private fleet of warships, with the unofficial aid of a few
royal ships and Lord Admiral Sir Paul Bigod, had raided a certain northern Spanish port and there
burned, sunk, or otherwise destroyed the bulk of a fleet being there assembled to bear an invasion
force of Crusaders against England. The sack of the place had been thorough and far more rewarding
than any had expected, and so even after all shares had been allotted, Bass Foster found himself
to have become an exceedingly wealthy man by any standards. "And it's just not right, none of it,"
thought His Grace of Norfolk, while he watched the squadron wheel and turn, draw pistols, present
and fire, then gallop off to repeat the exercise. "For most of my life before I ... we came here,
I seemed to utterly lack luck; anything and everything I wanted or needed or loved was snatched
away from me. It seemed, nonetheless, I tried to hold up my head and play the poor hand that life
continued to deal me as best I could.
"Here, on the other hand, I do nothing from the very start except try to keep myself and the
others alive and I draw ace after ace after ace. Hell, the way it is here, if I tripped and fell
facedown in a fucking dungheap, I'd probably come up with a fucking diamond, while the others.
...'.'
"Professor Collier, now. for instance. For all that he's always denigrated by Hal and Wolfie and
the King, these days, his many contributions helped Arthur and England far more than did mine,
back in the beginning. What did the Fickle Lady deal out to him? Capture and torture by a clan of
savage border ruffians and, after belated rescue, a bare monastery cell in which to howl out his
insanity for the rest of his life.
"Then there's Pete Fairley, whose talents set up the Royal Armory at York. His multishot hackbuts
won or all but won at least two full-scale battles tor English arms, and his large-bore
breechloading rifled cannon are on the way to revolutionizing naval warfare, not to even mention
the advances in other, less warlike, directions that his endless experiments are turning out. like
that light but sturdy and comfortable springed carriage there, that Buddy Webster came down here
in.
"And how about Bud Webster, too? His stockbreeding and general agricultural projects will no doubt
feed folks far better in years to come than any of us can now imagine, and he got damned nearly as
raw a deal as Bill Collier did. Yes, he's still got his sanity, but he'll limp stiff-legged for
the rest of his life and never be able to sit a horse in comfort or real security again. And that
means a great deal in this primitive, preindustrial world where about the only common means of
getting about in peace or war are on horseback or shank's mare. That fine carriage that Pete has
fabricated for Bud is handy and comfortable, true, but much use on the rutted, muddy, hole-pocked
abominations that pass for roads in this version of England will soon wreck it, no matter how well
and cunningly made, just as they wreck sutler waggons and even ponderous gun carriages, time and
again.
"Susan Sunshine, or whatever her name really was, now. that's another one. In life, both in this
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world and the one from which she was snatched along with the rest of us. she was a useless
parasite, so strung out on drugs most of
the time that she didn't know which end to wipe. When she and Dave Atkins ran out of drugs and
hallucinogens, they started trying to make use of a plethora of what are called 'witch plants,'
but after she killed herself with amanita of some variety, Dave snapped out of it. I guess it
scared the shit out of him, because he's been straight ever since, so you could say that the crazy
little doper accomplished something useful in death.
"Once his mind was clear, Dave turned out to be a very talented, highly intelligent, and most
flexible young man, near-genius level, I'd say. Despite the facts that he wasn't yet thirty when
he came here and had wasted some years of that on the dope scene, he still had earned two master's
degrees, and Pete says that he is marvelous at solving problems up at York, that he couldn't keep
the armory going sometimes were it not for Dave and Carey Carr.
"Not that Carey is in York that much of the time. He told me once that he became a trucker because
he liked traveling, didn't like being in one place for any length of time, and he's the same man
here as he was there. I guess he knows the road from York to Norwich or London better than any
other man; summer, winter, spring, or fall, good weather or foul, he's always on the move between
York and here or York and the King's camp, bringing new innovations of his and Pete's and Dave's
and teaching the recipients how to use them properly and safely.
"Krystal?" Foster sighed to himself. "Despite our son, little Joe, if I had it to do all over
again, knowing what I know now, I wouldn't ... I think. Krystal could've contributed—still could
contribute, for that matter—so much to the suffering folks of this world. She's a doctor of
medicine, a trained psychiatrist, and. in a pinch, a damned good battlefield surgeon. The surgeons
of this world are bloody-handed butchers who know next to nothing of human anatomy or of the
causes of infection, while those quacks who call themselves physicians are. when they're not
poisoning people with their henbane-and-mummy-dust pills, not one whit better than camp-meeting
faith healers. "With the assured backing of Hal—who, under the present circumstances, is as good
as Pope of England and Wales—she could accomplish true miracles in the fields of medicine,
surgery, and the like, but she doesn't; all she does is sit around and get bored and bitch and
rail at me in letters about ignoring her. And what the hell does she want me to do? Should I tell
the king that I can't do his bidding because my wife is bored and lonely and demands that I be
constantly nearby to bitch at in person rather than via post-rider?
"I guess that the kernel of the matter is that Krys just isn't very flexible, as easily adaptable
to new and strange situations as the rest of us proved to be when put to the test. To her way of
thinking, marriage means togetherness, total togetherness—she said once that her mother and father
were never parted for more than a few days at a time in nearly thirty years of marriage—and I
just've failed to get through to her that this is not twentieth-century New York or America, even,
but roughly England, roughly in the seventeenth century, and in a state of warring and invasions
with more invasions threatening.
"One thing, of course, is that she just doesn't have enough to do to occupy her mind and her days.
She refused to live at my castle in Rutland because it was too primitive to suit her—I guess she
never even thought of having it renovated into a more comfortable residence, she just left and
went back to Whyffler Hall. And up there. Sir Geoff and Henny Turnbull and Oily Shaftoe commanding
a hundred or more well-trained servants between them keep the place running like oiled clockwork.
"That was why I tried to persuade her to start a training program to impart of her knowledge to
the local midwives and maybe help to cut down on the appalling losses of newborn babies and their
mothers that are so common in this world. But after only a couple of weeks, she'd come up with
every cockamamie reason you could imagine why she couldn't keep it up—the midwives were all stupid
slatterns, know-it-alls, impossibly superstitious, religious fanatics, there was too much of a
language barrier, they all were filthy and the stench of a roomful of them gagged her. and on and
on ad infmitum, ad nauseam. I guess she'd rather just sit around and feel sorry for herself and
bitch at me than try to do something useful or helpful.
"And it's been damned near the same story since I prevailed upon Hal to let her and our son and
her retinue live on the episcopal estate with Bud Webster. Bud tried to get her interested in
stock-breeding . . . vainly, as it turned out. Hal, God bless him, took time that he didn't really
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have to spare to patiently explain to her just why it was necessary that I be so often gone for so
long on the King's business, and for all the good it did anyone, he might as well've been talking
to one of Bud Webster's aurochs bull-calves."
Melchoro Salazar and Don Diego, the Castilian having but just arrived back in York with Hal and
his retinue from Whyffler Hall, had lived on the estate for a few weeks and tried to interest the
Duchess of Norfolk in the ancient art of falconry, only to have her deride their sport as
barbaric, bloodthirsty foolishness. Both had still provided some diversion to Krystal, however,
until a chance remark informed her that both of them either did own or had owned some slaves—a
practice still quite common outside England, Wales, and Scotland, in this world—whereupon she had
made things so unpleasant for the two well-meaning and now contused noblemen that they left the
estate, collected the troop of galloglaiches lent by Bass to Hal for safety in traversing the
still-wild and virtually lawless north country between Whyffler Hall and York, and set out for
Norwich. As delicately as possible. Baron Melchoro suggested to Bass that his lady-wife was become
a bit mad.
"But good old Hal, he doesn't give up." thought Bass. "He said in the letter he sent down with
Melchoro that immediately he can spare the man, he means to send Rupen Ademian out there to live
on the estate for a while, figuring I guess that a relatively urbane man from the same world and
time as Krys can maybe settle her down to the realization that she's going to have to live the
rest of her life in this world and among these people so she'd better start making the best of it,
maybe doing something to improve conditions in it.
"Damned funny about the rest of that bunch of twentieth-century types that were jerked into this
world after the rest of us. Every one of them, male and female, just disappeared with the sole
exceptions of Rupen and one woman; and nobody since has seen or found or come across, despite
thorough, full-scaJe searches, airy a thread or trace of any of them. One minute it would seem
they were all in a guarded suite of rooms in the palace there on the archepiscopal estate, and the
next minute, poof, they were gone. I get gooseflesh just thinking of the matter. My house, which
was brought here with me. disappeared from here in almost the same way, but it couldn't've been
that projector that brought us here and sent the house back and then brought the second bunch
here, because by the time they disappeared, that projector was in pieces in Hal's lab in York ...
at least, I don't think it could"ve." He shuddered. "There's just still so damned much that I—none
of us, really—know about this business of projections."
Little did His Grace Sir Bass Foster, Duke of Norfolk, Earl of Rutland. Markgraf von Velegrad.
Baron of Strathtyne, Knight of the Garter, Knight of the Order of the Roten Adler. and Lord
Commander of the Horse know just how right he was—just how little any of them, even Harold,
Archbishop of York. knew.
Some weeks previously and many leagues to the north of that Norwich drill field, a wrinkled, white-
haired and -bearded old man wearing the garb of a high-ranking churchman sat in converse with an
olive-skinned man of middle years in a candle-lit chamber of the archepiscopal palace,
Yorkminster.
"Well, we did all we could do, I guess." opined Rupen Ademian. "I just hope it works, because
after all you've told me about those people of your time in the world you come from, I sure as
hell don't want to run into any living ones in this world and time."
"Oh, it will work, Rupen," Harold, Archbishop of York, assured him confidently. "I cannot but
wish I'd thought of something like this many years ago. Had I, then you and your unfortunate
friends and relatives would never have been projected into this world, but would've remained safe
where you all belonged."
"What do you think really happened to the others, Hal—to Kogh and John and the rest? Could agents
of the Roman Church have gotten into the country palace and gotten them all out without anybody
seeing them go? If so, then how?"
The old man sighed and shook his head. "No, Rupen, as I have told you before, I think that the
Church had nothing to do with it, and all the rumors that float around and about my palace be
damned. No. I think that they were snapped back to where they and you came from by way of some
quirk in the new, replacement device that— all unbeknownst to us, then—was at that time squatting
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