He raised the black wand before him. After tonight, he said to the voices, you will be free. After tonight.
A white-hot bolt smacked down ahead of them, at the top of the hill of San Gabriele. It spun over the earth and hit the dusty oak by the broken village gate. The old tree flamed.
San Gabriele itself was coming apart: dark fragments rolling and scuttling down the hill in all directions. “Pardo's men are deserting,” commented Damiano quietly.
Denezzi glanced at Damiano. The man's heavy face might have been made of wood. “Where?” he asked. “I can see nothing but blackness and the fire.”
“And you call me Owl-Eyes,” was the witch's answer.
They were at the base of the hill. There the repellent corpse-thing stopped and descended from the horse of bones.
The wall of flame split again, and a black gelding trotted through, followed by the pretty chestnut.
Damiano and Denezzi climbed the rutted market road to San Gabriele. Ogier followed, with his empty scabbard, and then the Savoyard troops, all slave to the constricting fire.
Pardo was not one of those who fled; Damiano was sure of that, as he had been sure of the general's presence since first riding out of the woods and beholding San Gabriele. Pardo was unforgettable, like a blister on one's palate. But the general was not in the open, at the barricades of rubble by the gateposts. At that moment, to be exact, there was no one manning the barricades. Damiano smiled and passed under the blasted oak. Almost three hundred men followed him, their faces gleaming with the heat.
Then the fire trellis parted, and two raging streams of orange raced each other over the heaps of rubble Pardo's men had built. They met behind the ruined village with a smack like canvas against water. San Gabriele was enclosed, as were both the panicked Romans and their terrified conquerors. Now there was only finding the general himself.
But Damiano glanced around uneasily. Pardo was not the only person in town whose feel he could recognize. Other presences licked his skin, tiny as the tongues of mice. He felt, obscurely, that these presences were not things he should ignore.
“Wait here,” he called over his shoulder, but seeing Ogier's expression of open, though impotent, insolence, he stopped in his tracks.
The Savoyard troops were huddled in sullen unity just inside the gates. The displaced men of the Piedmont made another group. Ogier's blue gaze was hard steel directed toward the witch. And Denezziâwell, Denezzi stood by Damiano's left hand, hating him.
These were not horses or dogs, or even human friends, who would stay at a word. These men had wills and plans of their own. If the Savoyards engaged with Pardo while Damiano was following his own curious nose, there would be unnecessary death. And it was to avoid that that Damiano had devised this bizarre attack.
With a gesture he drew a fiery chord through the circle of fire, separating the forces of Savoy from those of Pardo. Two rams in a pasture, he thought with some amusement as he turned away.
He strode down a street made unrecognizable by the ruin and by the multiplicity of dancing lights and shadows. Halfway along its length, on the right-hand side, stood a shed of dry stone, its stucco facade crumbled. This edifice seemingly had been too solid for the soldiers to destroy. Perhaps it was old Roman work. Damiano's smile flickered wider. He stopped at the door of brass and wood.
“Gaspare,” he called. “You are in there, aren't you? And... is that your sister? Or no... that's my old friend Till Eulenspiegel, no?”
There was a buzzing of speech, and then the heavy door rattled. Damiano flattened himself against the wall.
“Don't come out! Don't look at me. Just talk through the door.”
But a pale, freckled face, topped by greasy red hair, peered around the doorjamb. “Festilligambe!” shouted the boy. “Why not? You're alone on the street. Is the village burning? How could that be? There's no wood or thatch left in it. What a time for you to return, you old...
“Eh, Jan, did I ever tell you about this one? He can make lute strings cry for Mama....” Gaspare reached out and took Damiano's wrist in his scrawny, strong grip. He pulled him in.
Within the stone shed, the air smelled of old wood and wine. Light filtered between the naked stones, and Damiano's eyes discovered rows of barrels. One of these had been rolled into the middle of the shed and turned on end, and on it lay a huge sheep cheese, broken and gouged at random all over its surface.
Jan Karl slouched next to this makeshift table, seated on the rounded surface of another barrel. His bandaged hand rested on the greenish, mold-cased surface of the cheese wheel in proprietary fashion. Beside him, very close, sat the beautiful Evienne in her dress of green.
Damiano took a slow breath and felt his shoulders relax. “What do you see when you look at me?” he demanded of the company.
Methodically, Karl reached out and clawed a morsel out of the cheese. Methodically, he chewed it. Evienne giggled. “What should we see?” asked Gaspare. “It's pretty dim in here. You look tired, I think. That's understandable, considering the political situation.”
Damiano closed his eyes in simple thanks. “I am under a curse,” he tried to explain, as he sank down onto the barrel across from the redheaded woman. “Or perhaps it's not a curse but a premonition. People tell me I appear to be burning alive. They run. They cover their faces.” He sighed and leaned on his staff.
“It's been very useful to me.”
Jan Karl swallowed. His narrow blue eyes regarded Damiano doubtfully. “Maybe you are the butt of a joke, Delstrego. You don't look different to me.”
“Nor to me,” added Evienne. She looked like she might have added more to that but for the restraining presence of the Dutchman next to her.
Damiano shook his head. He realized there was too much to explain, and he could only devote a part of his attention to the amiable scene before him while his fire imprisoned both the village and the Savoyard forces.
“Where's your lute? And your dog?” asked Gaspare, standing near the open door. He didn't wait for answers. “Have some cheese and put your mouth to the bunghole of the barrel under it. You spill a lot that way, but we've got a lot.
“I really do think the village is burning.”
“Broken,” replied Damiano distantly. “And dead. No, thank you. I don't feel like cheese, tonight. Nor wine.”
Gaspare stepped over and looked his friend in the face. “I'm sorry, Festilligambe, if your dog died. I liked her. I like dogs. And your lute, well...” The boy shrugged. “These are terrible times to live in.”
Both Jan Karl and Evienne grunted in unison. “Midwinter, and they tear all the buildings down,” continued the boy. “Then they make campfires of the thatch and furniture. Was that sensible, I ask you? Everyone with anywhere to go gets out.
“Me, I stay to watch over Evienne, but it's no good for her, either. Lot's of business, yes...”
“If you can call it that,” introjected the prostitute, glaring vengefully at the wheel of cheese.
“But they don't pay,” added her brother. “And Jan Karl here... Where's he going to go with a hand like that, too tender to touch anything yet and not a sou to his name? Where is San Gabriele when we need him?”
Damiano shook his head to all these questions. “Well, my friend. It's over, now, for Pardo. The army of Savoy is in the town.” He rose to his feet.
“As a matter of fact, I must get back to them, now,” he said, and turned to the door.
“The Green Count?” Gaspare gasped, and he danced from one foot to the other. “You are with the Savoyard army?”
“They are with me,” corrected the witch. “And they don't like it much.” He stepped out.
“Gesu and all the saints guard you,” Damiano added, quietly, and with a certain formality. The door creaked shut.
The flames flapped and roared, and he passed through them. The Savoyard company turned to him as one man. “I know where Pardo is hiding,” he announced briefly, and the fire that bisected the village stuttered and died.
Ogier snapped a word, and the men, for the first time that night, made ranks. Damiano led the way along the central street of the village.
He found Paolo Denezzi at his side. The man's bearish aspect was much reduced, for the hair of his face and head was singed to the root and his naked skin gleamed a taut and ugly pink.
“You attempted my barrier,” remarked Damiano. “That was a mistake. The fire is not an illusion.” Denezzi made only an animal noise.
Damiano turned to the commander. “My lord Marquis,” he began. “Do I still look as I did before? Burning?”
Ogier concealed his amusement behind a mock civility. “You must forgive me, Monsieur Demon, if you have been engaged in
la toilette,
and I did not notice. To me you appear much the same.”
Damiano merely nodded, and they passed through the smoke and wind to the center of San Gabriele, where a few stone buildings stood undamaged.
“He's here,” said the witch. He stood with his eyes closed before a squat square tower. His head moved right, then left, as though he were rubbing his face into a pillow. “He's in the cellar, with a few men. Follow me, please.”
Before Ogier, or troublesome Paolo Denezzi, could object, Damiano raised his staff before him and leaped onto the outside staircase. He bounded up.
At the door to the interior he was met by a sentry with a sword. The man cried out and dropped the glowing weapon. Damiano passed in.
It was like home, this place: the well-built tower of a family with means. The floor of the entranceway was tiled in red and blue, and the walls were soot free, washed fresh white. None of these carved oaken chairs or velvet divans had been burned for campfires, and woolen tapestries added their warmth to the rooms.
Damiano passed down the long stairs; no man dared to face him. Behind him was a cry and the sound of massed footsteps. Damiano ground his teeth against the knowledge that someone had slain the weaponless sentry.
The cellar had not been meant to be lived in. It was a warren of boxes and barrels and furniture stored on end. Though he could see reasonably well in this darkness, certainly better than any ordinary man, Damiano sent light into his staff.
General Pardo, neatly built, clothed in black leather, lounged amid the clutter on a chair upholstered in cloth of gold. His sword lay on his lap. Before him stood three swordsmen wearing his colors, each with sword and round shield. These men wore hauberks of link-mail. Pardo did not. All four faced the apparition without flinching, and the three guardsmen advanced upon Damiano.
At the moment Damiano saw Pardo his attention snapped away from the fire, and all around the village it fluttered and died.
“No, Carlo,” called Pardo in moderate tones. “Roberto, Gilberto, no. I fear your techniques will be... worthless here.”
Pardo stood and bowed. “I take it, Signore, that the Devil has allied himself with the cause of Savoy?”
Damiano was struck by the literal accuracy of that statement. “Yes,” he admitted. “You may say that.”
Pardo looked about him and rested the tip of his sword blade upon the earth. “Well then. By all rights I ought to have made an alliance with the Almighty against that possibility, but... unfortunately... I neglected my strategies there.”
“Your men have all run away.” Damiano stared at Pardo. The lithe dark figure was fascinating in that it was only that of a man.
“Run away?” echoed Pardo, raising his head with a glimmer of hope. “They were not all burnt to death, then, or swept into hell alive?”
“There is only one man dead, that I know of,” said Damiano, and Pardo's eyes narrowed.
“Do I know that voice?” he asked aloud. “Yes! Are you not the young patriot from the town belowâthe one who claimed he could not use witchcraft for the purposes of war?”
“I am,” Damiano admitted, and he heard men on the stair behind him. He did not turn to greet Ogier and his men. Paolo Denezzi advanced to the witch's side, growling like a beast at Pardo.
“I am, General, but you yourself convinced me otherwise.”
“What about the price, witch, that you said was too high for a man to pay?” Pardo's eyes shifted from face to face. Recognizing Ogier, he bowed insouciantly.
“Ogier de Savoy, I believe. I think we met at Avignon last spring, at the salon of our Holy Father.”
Damiano could not see whether Ogier acknowledged the salute.
âThe price?” he said. “Look at me, General, and you will see the price.”
With a theatrical sigh, Pardo let his sword drop to the dry dust floor. “It is too bad, then. You could just as well have damned yourself for me as against me. I admit I was a bit precipitous at your first refusal, but...”
“You could not rape Partestrada and expect me to join with you, General.”
Pardo shrugged. “Why not?”
Damiano took a deep breath and adjusted the flaming stick in his hand. As he glanced behind him he saw only a wall of hate, directed at the Roman general and directed at him. “Because a man's city is like his mother.”
With a snort and a sigh of weariness, Pardo sat back down on the glittering cushion. “That again.” He looked up at Damiano with his dark eyes steady and fearless.
“It is idiocy that has damned you, Delstrego, and ideas wildly mistaken. A city is not a woman, and its affections are purely... commercial.”
There was a titter from behind Damiano, probably from one of the Piedmontese, since the Savoyard soldiers generally spoke French. “It is true,” admitted Damiano, thoughtfully, “that Partestrada never really loved me, but she was a kind enough mother for all that, and it is for her sake I have worked toward your fall.”
Pardo glanced meaningfully from the apparition to the blue coat of Savoy. “And this one,” he said. “Will he be any better?”
Ogier put his hand on the pommel of the plain infantry sword he was now wearing. He smiled dryly. “That should be of no interest to you, pope's man,” he said.