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Sergeant Orozco snorted. "The monsters here are," he said, tipping his cup toward Gonji and swigging.
Cardenas ignored him. "Then you say that the sorcery operating in this valley is all mere trickery? I a.s.sure you the warlock has left little to the imagination. People die in the streets here of-"
"Oh no," Gonji countered, shaking his head. "What youve seen here is all too real. I only question the source of the powers that strike at you. Ive seen their like in many places. Evil is strong in Europe these days. Strong and directed, like some careful conspiracy. And, so sorry, but your vaunted Inquisition, Padre, strikes out in the darkness at its own possessions, at helpless innocence, like some angry, frightened child."
Robles slammed down his goblet. "Theres no surprise in your saying that-you, a heathen, sitting so near the Churchs powerful grasp."
"Grasp," Gonji replied caustically, "is the proper word, I think. Religious rapacity is but one of this continents problems."
Father Robles cheeks reddened. "Si? Well then tell me, por favor, what pagan ideas you would bring us that would solve our complex problems, that would-would rescue us from the darkness of sin and evil."
"What do I believe?"
"Si."
Gonji smiled and clasped his hands. "Im not sure what my...rather eclectic code encompa.s.ses anymore. At times I find myself believing almost nothing. There are wonders in existence that neither your theology-nor your science, Cardenas-can hope to explain. Others whose delicate beauty are destroyed in the explanation of the mystery. Have you, since your return from your university, Senor Cardenas, discussed with Father Robles the continuing controversy over the movement of the sun?"
The two both reddened now.
"Or will you cross swords over this mystery," the samurai pressed, "at a later date? Perhaps when the army has cleared the warlocks power from your lives, neh? I believe there is room enough for all manner of contemplation. Contemplation requires so little s.p.a.ce, neh? Observe. Meditate on your observations. And the true works of evil will not be able to disguise themselves from you."
The priest splayed his hands on the table.
"And you, senor, have accorded us a perfect example of the workings of the Devil. Your simplistic views are an invitation to chaos. Obscurantism is the Devils ale."
Gonji pondered the term. It was the first time hed heard it used. It would not be the last.
"If my beliefs give you offense," he said at length, "then you have two choices: Give me s.p.a.ce, or kill me." A hush settled over the room, dispersed when Orozco coughed and Anita seized the opportunity to refill their goblets. Father Robles clapped a hand over his, checking her almost too late.
"I wonder," Gonji added, "which one Iasu would choose."
Father Robles sat still as an ice field before cracking an unexpected, if joyless, smile. "Very clever. I shall, of course, give you the s.p.a.ce you request. It isnt often that I break bread with strangers of exotic persuasions, and I must allow that youre an interesting hombre, if an irreverent one. The captain trusts you; so I suppose thats endors.e.m.e.nt enough."
Salguero hid his struggle against a grin behind his goblet. "Youll have to forgive me, Padre, but I knew it would come to this. Gonji is a longtime critic of certain of Holy Mother Churchs eh...postures, shall we say?"
"Dont apologize," the priest replied, relaxing again. "He found a way into this valley, and no travelers have done that for many weeks now. Quiza-maybe h.e.l.l be the one to show you how to beat this wicked sorcerer who opposes us. I may even grant him my blessing when he leaves, provided he spreads none of his heathen ideas in this already dirty little town."
His tone was lighthearted, but Anita, who ever evaded his eyes at all costs, slipped from the room. Gonji bowed shallowly to the priest, who nodded in return.
"Why have you come to Barbaso?" Cardenas asked.
"Si, tell us what horrors youve seen along the way." Orozco shrugged defensively to see the scowl Salguero shot him.
"No, its all right," Gonji said. "I just wished to take the shortest route to Zaragoza, and Barbaso is the only town of appreciable size on the way. I needed supplies, and some companions.h.i.+p, I dont mind admitting-"
The captain laughed and smoothed the tendrils of his mustache. "You have changed-admitting to human weakness like that!"
"Although I had no idea who Id find here, thank the Great Kami that you and Orozco here are still in fighting shape. And thats it. Ive never had much luck with villages, and Barbaso was it, if my maps to be trusted."
"Youre not serious about seeing Cervera, though."
Gonji looked pained. "I must, Hernando. I must clear the air between us, explain the truth of what happened to Theresa. It will be one of the most difficult things Ive ever done."
Gloom descended on the captain. He leaned back with folded arms and stared at his boots. "h.e.l.l kill you, Gonji. You know, I was instructed to do so myself."
"It would have been your duty."
They shared a look of pained camaraderie. And then Gonji broke it, affecting an arch air. "So old King Philip has gone to his ancestors. I should have known. So old by now. And Philip the Third straddles the dais of power."
"Do you think hes forgotten his fathers favor of you? He never liked you much, you know."
Gonji smiled thinly. "Hai, to say the least."
"And as far as who holds the lever of power these days in Spain, Im afraid youre even more luckless there than if it were Philip the Pup. Most of the administrative strength is in the hands of Prime Minister Rojas-Duke de Lerma, do you recall? The Hammer of the Inquisition?"
Thumbing his chin, Gonji grew pensive. "Ahh, so desu ka? Is that right?" He shook his head somberly. "Out of the Devils hand and into his mouth, so it seems."
"I must take exception with that remark, sir," Father Robles grated.
"So sorry. I was referring to my own situation-"
"Were you?" Salguero cut in.
"Its a d.a.m.ned good picture of the way things have been," Sergeant Orozco added, growling into his goblet.
"It might well describe the command prerogative in general," Salguero continued, drowning out the sergeants muttering. He spoke to Gonji but all the while looked at the fidgeting priest. "Taxes ruin us, the Turks loom at every port the English dont raid, and what does the cub king do? He oppresses the Moriscos, our own countrymen-and Christians at that!-between observations of endless feasts and hypocritical pious rites that-"
"Such talk is heresy!" Father Robles railed.
"Si, and more!" the captain shouted, half rising from his seat. "Treason-I speak treason, Padre." He turned to Gonji, an almost imploring look wrinkling his brow. "They gave away my hometown, Kyoos.h.i.+. Gave it to the French out of a gutless fear they called political expediency. Now my family lives under blasted frances oppression while I sit here and die a slow and hopeless death. While I watch my proud company decimated and turned to sniveling sc.u.m. Theyre besotted and spiritless. Those the warlock doesnt destroy this filthy town drains."
Robles made a censuring noise but said nothing. Salguero leaned against the table edge, his bitterness permeating the atmosphere of the comedor, his harsh words having drawn Anita back to the doorway. She stood at the jamb, aiming a look of contempt at her late paramour. Sergeant Orozco, now well into his cups, slumped back in his seat and kept nodding his head heavily in sullen agreement. Pablo Cardenas worked his jaw silently, rearranging the sc.r.a.ps on his plate with a knife.
"So what will you do, senchoo?" Gonji inquired gently. "You still have your duty."
"Duty!" Salguero spat, reclaiming his composure almost at once. "What can I do?" He sat back down.
Gonji cleared his throat and drew himself straight and tall in his chair. "You know, I still have to pa.s.s Castle Malaguer when I leave the valley. This business has stoked my curiosity. There are certain questions I would have an answer to. And you may need a tour guide to steer you through this sorcerers gauntlet."
The captains eyes glowed. "Kyoos.h.i.+? Are you saying what I think?"
Gonji folded his arms, his eyes narrowing. "There is one thing that troubles me about this place, this town. Before I give aid here, I want to know something. Why have I seen no children since I arrived here?"
They looked from one to the other uncertainly.
"Theyve been kept indoors, protected, since this war against Domingo Negro began," Cardenas explained.
Father Robles elaborated. "Its never safe, day or night, in Barbaso. The innocents-"
"I dont understand what youre driving at, Gonji," Salguero said.
"I want to see children of this town," the samurai demanded.
"I a.s.sure you we have them," the solicitor said. "I have two of my own."
"Bring them here. Or, if you prefer, we can go to your home. But I want to see them for myself."
They groused and debated the necessity and reason for the samurais strange request, but at last Cardenas complied, bringing his children, a boy and girl who looked tousled from interrupted sleep but bright-eyed with apprehension. An armed escort led them into the manses parlor.
Gonji made gentle small talk with them, told them brief tales of his youth in j.a.pan, and presented them each with a confection for their trouble. His quiet manner set them at ease, but the other adults were discomfited by this mystery, for they could see how he seemed to study the children, looking them over carefully and probing them with odd questions, seeded throughout the entertaining patter that soon had the children entranced.
When the children had been led back home, Gonji sat before the parlors roaring hearth and poured himself another ale. His somber expression warded away the others curious glances. They discussed the lancers campaign against the warlock until Cardenas returned.
"Would you mind telling me," he said, shrugging off his greatcoat, "why my children had to be disturbed from their sleep and dragged out into the cold night air?"
Gonji stared into the blazing fire. "Theyre very fine young ones. They seem ruddy enough-and well loved."
"Muchos gracias," Cardenas replied, his words laced with sarcasm.
"Exactly what are you implying?" Father Robles asked.
"One day," Gonji replied, unmoving before the crackling fire. "One day Ill explain."
CHAPTER EIGHT.
Buey swung his huge fist in a hard right cross that might have shattered a helmet visor. The little j.a.ppo ducked the blow and darted a straight, short punch at his midsection.
The man the other lancers called The Ox took the shot full in his hard belly with a snarling grunt. He leered down at his smaller opponent in a broad display of unconcern with the others blows. But the last roundhouse kick to his ribs had hurt.
This hombre could kick.
Buey had fought the best of the accursed French savate foot-fighters and beaten them all insensible, but this Orientals kick-boxing was faster, more deadly, and far more varied in its attack.
Buey closed on him with a bullish charge, roaring intimidatingly and las.h.i.+ng out with a furious series of punches. The j.a.ppo backed off with a quick-stamping retreat, fending his punis.h.i.+ng swings with open-handed deflecting blocks. Buey afforded him no opening, and when he sensed another rib kick coming, he raised his knee sharply.
Their legs thudded off each other. The j.a.ppo dropped his hands to steady his balance, and Buey bounced a glancing shot off the side of his head. But he failed to follow it up quickly enough-the Orientals sharp punch snapped his head back. He tasted blood in his mouth, felt the warm trickle in his mustache.
Growling, he came on with a rush of emotion, the barracks crowd, shuffling and pus.h.i.+ng out of the combatants way, pleading with Buey to finish this arrogant meddler. Buey executed a leaping front kick aimed at decapitating Gonji, but at the top of his kick he realized his mistake. In the air, vulnerable, he watched helplessly as the Oriental dropped low and spun. His sweeping kick knocked Bueys pivot leg out from under him.
Landing hard on the barracks floor, he raised his arms across his face as the j.a.ppo leapt astride him.
But a whomping kick in the back knocked Gonji into a headfirst roll. Buey could hear the breath hiss from the others clenched teeth and sensed an advantage. Pus.h.i.+ng to his feet, he came at the j.a.ppo with flailing ham fists, his knees pumping defensively to ward off any kicks, seasoning his experienced attack with well-aimed snap-kicks.
His frustration drove him to insensate fury. His blows alternated between landing ineffectually and striking air. Another kick, this one returning pain for his effort as the Oriental blocked his ankle with a hard and fast knife-hand.
Another sharp pain in a knee, then an ankle-the other ankle- The j.a.ppo had initiated a lightning hit-and-run attack with low side snap-kicks, targeting his s.h.i.+ns.
Bueys glances flicked down at his opponents panther-quick feet. He raised a knee against a kick. Suddenly the samurai was high in the air. His two-legged dropkick caught Buey full in the upper chest. He stumbled backward, breathless, and sat down heavily on his behind.
But the Oriental had landed badly, wincing from the pain. He must have injured an ankle. Buey pushed himself up again and came on with rotating fists, his shoulders squared with determination. The samurai had altered his stance to favor the sore leg.
They exchanged a rapid round of punches, the soldiers oohing and bellowing with excitement. It would all end swiftly now.
Buey cuffed the j.a.ppo with a short left. The samurai dropped back a step, c.o.c.ked his injured leg, began snapping out with it, re-c.o.c.king, feinting high and low jabs. Then- A quick straight front kick hit Buey just above the groin. His arm dropped reflexively. A curling left roundhouse kick blasted him in his already inflamed ribs. Breath whoofed from his lungs. The samurai changed legs again-hed been bluffing-the right came round and cracked into Bueys rib cage on the other side. A feint with a low kick- A staggering wheel-kick crashed into Bueys jaw, strangling his hooting supporters down to gasps. He heard whispers through cotton ticking, saw harsh scintillas in a blur of taper light. Dazed, he took a backward stumbling step. And landed hard on the floor again, his arms extended behind him, palms flat.
Layers of gauze lifted from his vision. The samurai stood before him, gathering his breath, hands on hips.
"No mas?" the j.a.ppo asked softly.
Rage and adrenaline coursed along with the blood that pounded in Bueys temples. He staggered to his feet, spat out a tooth, and came on. As he closed with the swaggering samurai, he saw Montoya raise a stool behind the tough little b.a.s.t.a.r.d and poise it for a blow.
Buey waded in quickly.
Gonji had been forced to fight Buey. After two days of futile attempts to instill discipline in Salgueros dissipated First Catalonian Lancers, hed decided there was no other way.
Taunts and insults, poor efforts and intentional incompetence had greeted his endeavors to train the company for all-out engagement with the warlocks powers. Fighting the champion around whom the soldiers rallied was the last recourse-short of killing one of them-at Gonjis disposal by which he might win their respect. Apparently it had worked. They now set about their training in more businesslike fas.h.i.+on. But it had not been easy: Buey had possessed a surprising quickness to go with one of the hardest punches the samurai had ever suffered. One blow had rung his skull and left him with a headache for hours after the fight. And the poor landing after the jump-kick had hampered the healing of his already tender ankle.
In the sober aftermath of his victory, Gonji could not be sure what Bueys anger and shame might bode for the future. But at least The Ox had proven himself a man of some honor: Hed stopped the nefarious Montoya from crus.h.i.+ng Gonjis skull, grabbing the stool from the troopers hands and knocking him out with one meaty punch.
As soon as Gonji had hired on as Salgueros military adviser, hed implemented a program of discipline and training at arms that immediately proved unpopular with the lancer company. Hed set them to rectifying their s.h.i.+ftless habits-from tending to personal cleanliness and unkempt uniforms to purging their rancid barracks; from setting the disgraceful stables aright to oiling and polis.h.i.+ng their weapons.
The weapons training was undertaken with sullen skepticism as to its value: Of what use were swords and bows to the trooper equipped with the modern accoutrements of war-muskets and pistols? Gonjis arguments concerning the long-range and rapid-fire advantages of bow and arbalest, as well as the close-range and mystical dependability of forthright steel in certain circ.u.mstances, were dismissed with snickers.
He nonetheless had pushed them through the training until his patience with their wayward att.i.tudes had run out and hed been forced to win their grudging respect and fear by taking on their champion.
Following the fight with Buey, Gonji succeeded in gaining their attention. They worked harder with their dusted-off bows, and both the samurai and his former mates took a nostalgic satisfaction in the mounted archery and fencing drills. Gonji, for his part, felt the creeping indifference and raw survivalism of the past weeks lifting before a renewed sense of duty and purpose. He threw himself into his leaders.h.i.+p responsibilities l.u.s.tily, though in quiet personal moments he was given to spates of melancholia: Bittersweet memories of the training of Veduns valiant militia troubled his sleep, made him mindful of the spiritual vacuity of the present tactical pursuits. He was glad, in these moments, for the presence of his old friend Captain Salguero and the wry wit of the loyal Sergeant Orozco.
The lancers proved to be quite capable marksmen with their pistols and arquebuses, and they took easily to the technique of alternating firing lines. But powder supplies were running low, and little could be wasted in the training. Similarly, many of them showed an apt.i.tude for mounted archery; they were skilled hors.e.m.e.n, and some quickly learned to hit moving targets at considerable distances while in full gallop. However, arrows and crossbow quarrels, too, were in short supply, and Barbasos querulous fletcher grumbled incessantly at being pressed into working overtime at producing them. Gonji discovered with frustration that the more the man and his apprentices were pushed, the poorer the quality of their work became. As a youth in j.a.pan, Gonji recalled, he had become accustomed to firing a thousand arrows daily during kyu-jutsu training; on a good day the troopers in Barbaso were fortunate to be able to launch two dozen.
Close combat training with sword and axe and halberd was unpopular from the outset. Less favored still, after a lancers shoulder was unhinged in a mounted pole-arm training accident.
Discipline and fighting ability increased rapidly as the days pa.s.sed. A sudden warm spell graced the land, invigorating the lancers, making them mindful of the coming spring thaw. They worked still harder.
Some, though, were a constant problem, particularly the faction led by the insidious Montoya, who were ever lacking in sincerity and responded neither to coddling nor strictness. Montoya himself boasted the personality of an arrogant jackal and spent more time in the stockade than on duty. It was with vindictive satisfaction that Gonji received the news of Montoyas ultimate removal from action: Ostensibly relieved of duty because he was ill, Montoya was discovered in the cellar of a private home, irretrievably drunk and in the embrace of a woman. The incorrigible trooper was detained pending a proper court martial for malingering and dereliction of duty. And it was only by virtue of Captain Salgueros mercy that he was spared field execution, given the present dire circ.u.mstances. Divested of his malignant influence, even Montoyas cronies now reluctantly displayed a fresh vigor in the training.
The townsfolk took a dim view of Gonjis importance. He knew their thinking, for it was mirrored in their eyes, and hed suffered it many times before: How could an inferior-and a heathen at that-be entrusted with a military advisers.h.i.+p whose actions might decide Barbasos future? He heard secondhand that Father Robles was spreading discord among the town leaders over Salgueros trust in this oriental killer with the reputation of a cold-blooded fiend.
Anita, the spoiled daughter of the late magistrate and Salgueros erstwhile paramour, had taken up with Ferrugia, the ostler who tended the lancers horses. She never failed to be about the stables when the steeds were being retired for the day. Always ravis.h.i.+ngly attired and scented-in a fas.h.i.+on that was almost pathetically comic in the earthy environment of the stables-and suggestively sidling up to the blus.h.i.+ng Ferrugia, she would aim cold stares at the captain and at Gonji. The soldiery found her an amusing object of desire and took to calling her The Minx.