Inquisition (23 page)

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Authors: Alfredo Colitto

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BOOK: Inquisition
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The man stuck his feet in but didn’t manage to put up enough resistance. He tried to catch hold of Mondino by the hair, but only got his cap. Stumbling against the low parapet wall, the stalker’s knees buckled and a second later he fell into the water with a splash. He stood up almost immediately, dripping wet and furious, and began to wade towards the bank, his eyes alight with a ferocious determination.

Two men on the other side shouted and jumped into the water, not to help the man but to catch Mondino, who they had obviously taken for the villain. Another two people ran towards the bridge just ahead to cut him off. If they caught him, they might even kill him. It was not infrequent that thieves were lynched by citizens and came before the judge either dead or as good as. Mondino turned and began to run between the houses, vines and orchards, knowing that his lungs wouldn’t hold out for ever.

When Guido Arlotti climbed out of the canal he was just in time to catch a glimpse of Mondino’s spare form disappearing behind the wall of the house, already a good distance from his pursuers. If they managed to catch him, Guido hoped that they’d give him a good going-over before bringing him back to the windmill.

Boiling with rage inside,Arlotti told his rescuers that the man had tried to rob him, but fortunately hadn’t succeeded. Perhaps they’d noticed how Mondino was dressed? He certainly didn’t look like a common pilferer. Guido said that he, Mondino, was a penniless student who had resorted to crime to pay his debts. But the others didn’t seem to think it mattered much. They asked if he was all right and Guido thanked them and accepted the offer to go into the windmill to get dry and wait for news. But first he gave a coin to a boy and told him to go and fetch two men from the tavern that he used as a base in Borgo di Galliera, which luckily was not far away. He promised the boy another coin if he brought them back in good time.

The windmill was small and full of people. There were clients bringing sacks of grain to mill, others who came to buy flour from the miller’s wife and people who were just dropping by to talk about the weather and the price of goods, which gave no sign of dropping. The miller lent Guido a spare tunic and his wife, a plump blonde with a generous bosom, went to hang out his clothes in the sun to dry. Guido had to repeat his story an infinity of times: the attack, the fight, his fall in the canal and the crook’s escape.

He smiled and thanked them for their help, but inside he was beside himself with fury. When the crowd finally tired of his tale, he retired to a corner to wait for his accomplices and to plot his revenge. Even if the people running after him didn’t catch Mondino, he would find him and make him pay for what he’d done. In fact he rather hoped they didn’t catch him. After all, he knew where to find him. It had now become a personal issue.

*

Mondino was now sure that the men trying to catch him had abandoned the chase so he slowed down to a normal pace, then he stopped to get his breath back, leaning on the wall of a house. He was exhausted. That sort of exercise made the blood too hot and burned the lungs, but also produced a pleasant feeling of euphoria. Alternatively, he thought, perhaps it wasn’t the exercise that produced it, but the satisfaction of having fought and come out on top. He was certain that the man would come after him again, after all, he must know exactly where he lived. But it didn’t matter. On the following evening, the time the Inquisitor had conceded to him ran out and one way or another the question would be resolved. At that point even the spy would go back to his master. Right now the important thing was to have got away. Mondino wanted to ask for the translation of the map as quickly as possible and then get back to Hugues de narbonne’s house to see how he was. He had decided that if the Frenchman was conscious, he would interrogate him before Gerardo got there.

Mondino crossed the Circla paling near the postern of Borgo di San Pietro, passed a wool-fulling mill and cut left through the fields, still following the canal that ran parallel to the city walls towards Porta delle Lame.

There were more people around than last time, perhaps because it was a saturday, and this made it easier to pass unobserved. From early in the morning, the traffic was almost all moving in the direction of the city. For the most part they were farmers and artisans heading for the market on foot or with hand-pulled carts. Every now and then someone walked or trotted by on a horse.

Since he now knew the way, it took him less time to get to the sorceress’s house than he had thought. No one came out to greet him this time either, but as soon as he shouted her name the woman called for him to go in. Mondino went forward cautiously, however the dogs were nowhere to be seen. He reached the door, pushed it open and stood on the threshold, transfixed by surprise. The single room, made up of kitchen, study and bedroom, was much bigger than the outside walls suggested and it was well lit. The place was full of a seemingly immense quantity of objects and yet order reigned supreme. It was not a conventional order, thought Mondino, taking in the piles of books that made towers and columns across the floor, the clumps of medicinal herbs hung to dry head down in a corner, the shelves full of terracotta and glass jars, the Arabic alembic and numerous copper and wooden objects for which he couldn’t imagine the use. But the general impression was that the owner, bent over the pages of a great volume that was open on the table in the centre of the room, would immediately be able to put her hand on anything she needed. Mondino had never been inside a sorceress’s house before but he had imagined it quite different.

‘Come in, do,’ she said, looking up. ‘You’ve returned. So I imagine you will be more polite this time.’

Mondino made a slight bow that could be understood as a greeting or an affirmative response. He went in and stopped in the middle of the room. The woman closed the book, smiled and seemed to remember her own good manners. She gestured regally towards the only bench in the house, at one of the long sides of the table, and added, ‘Sit down, please. You haven’t yet told me who you are.’

Mondino said that he was a scholar from the
Studium
, using the name of one of his students. The woman gave him a sharp look and then introduced herself too: ‘Hadiya bint Abi Bakr, at your service. But you may call me Adia Bintaba like everyone else.’ she sat down on the bench at an easy distance from him. Then she added, quite naturally, as though they had only left one another minutes before, ‘You mentioned a map.’

Mondino hurriedly took out the parchment, without talking of money this time. If the woman wanted payment for the translation, she would have to ask him for it.

Adia looked at it carefully. ‘The Arabic sentences are verses alluding to a marriage,’ she said, confirming Hugues de narbonne’s opinion. ‘But they are incomplete, as though some words were missing. Written like this, they don’t make sense. As for the map itself, the characters between the two lions indicate something red, which seems strange to me.’ ‘Why?’

‘Because there’s no point in writing “red” under the red circle. It must mean something else.’ ‘Could it be a place in spain?’

Adia’s face lit up. ‘But of course. The red fortress in the city of Gharnata that you call Granada. It probably indicates the point of departure, while the red circle at the top that has no writing next to it represents the point of arrival.’

Hugues de Narbonne had been telling the truth. Mondino slumped forward, putting his elbows on his thighs and his head in his hands. To say that he was disappointed did not do justice to his state of mind at all. Only then did he realise that he had doubted the Frenchman’s word on purpose, to cultivate the dream that an important message was hidden in the verses. But they really were meaningless words and if they were hiding anything, it was directions to reach a place in spain.

‘Are you absolutely sure? I mean, you know, this map has got something to do with alchemy—’

‘Really?’ she interrupted him, with the same indecipherable expression in her eyes. ‘So perhaps you are about to suggest that the marriage to which the verses refer is that between mercury and sulphur, the metallic and inflammable principles of matter. Have I guessed right?’

‘How do you know about such things?’ was all that Mondino managed to say.

This woman produced one surprise after another. She didn’t talk like a country sorceress. In fact she didn’t even talk like a woman.

Adia leaned an elbow on the table and smiled, showing her white, regular teeth. ‘I come from a family of alchemists. My father didn’t have any sons and so he passed all his knowledge on to me. It’s not common, but it happens.’

‘But the man who gave me your name spoke of you as a sorceress,’ said Mondino.

Adia leaned towards him slightly and Mondino saw that she wasn’t actually all that young. She must have been about twenty-five, and yet there was no sign of the presence of a husband or children in the house. Could it be that such a beautiful woman had not found a man prepared to ask her to be his wife? or perhaps it was she who didn’t want to get married? It seemed absurd, but then she was a strange woman.

‘People don’t trust sorceresses,’ said Adia, seriously. ‘But they would trust a woman of science much less. I chose the lesser evil.’ she smiled again, and it seemed to Mondino that there was the shadow of sadness in her eyes. ‘Besides, the title of sorceress keeps the men at bay,’ she added. ‘The good ones and the bad ones.’

‘I see,’ said Mondino, in embarrassment, just to say something. ‘So if you say that the verses have nothing to do with alchemy, I can believe you.’

Adia Bintaba straightened her back. ‘I said nothing of the sort. The fact that there are verses referring to a marriage on a map full of alchemical symbols cannot be by chance. I only said that the verses are incomplete. If we knew the missing words, it would all be much clearer. Have you got anything else? I don’t know, a letter, a book ... If you want me to help, you must tell me the truth.’

‘This map is all I’ve got,’ said Mondino, shrugging his shoulders.

‘And how did you get it?’

‘I can’t tell you that.’

Adia’s expression made quite clear what she thought of his lack of trust without the need for words. ‘You can’t tell me,’ she repeated, in a reflective tone. ‘Could you at least tell me what the secret is that you hope to discover by deciphering this map?’

Mondino had not anticipated that question and for a moment he was at a loss. He wanted to put her on the right path in the hope that she would see a link that had passed him by, but he certainly couldn’t talk to her about what he had done. He decided to make something up.

‘As I told you, I study medicine. Some friends and I are doing research on the circulation of the blood and it occurred to someone that if blood could be transformed into solid metal, we could get a very precise idea of the vascular system. Now, this map—’

‘To whom, precisely, did this idea occur?’ Her interruption took him by surprise and Mondino replied, ‘To my Master, Mondino de Liuzzi.’

‘Mondino,’ repeated Adia. ‘Taddeo’s student?’

‘That’s right,’ said the physician, unable to hide his amazement at finding she knew his name as well as that of taddeo Alderotti. ‘Do you know him?’ ‘Only by name. The man is ignorant.’

The smile vanished from Mondino’s face. ‘My Master is considered one of the best physicians alive,’ he replied, curtly.

Adia seemed to be trying not to laugh in his face. She lifted up both her hands to diffuse his protests and said, ‘I am not doubting his merits. In fact I have great respect for Mondino’s anatomical research and I am looking forward to reading the treatise that he is writing. But as far as I’m concerned whoever makes progress only externally and not internally will remain ignorant.’

‘I don’t follow you.’

Adia looked at him with an expression of condescension. Then she said, ‘Science must develop man just as man develops science’, as though it explained everything. ‘What do you mean? Be a bit clearer.’

‘I will explain in simple words so that you can understand,’ she replied. It was obvious that she was having fun at his expense and Mondino felt ill at ease, as if he were the only one in a group of people who didn’t get the joke. ‘But first tell me something. Why did your master send you and not come in person?’

‘He had no idea that you were an erudite alchemist,’ Mondino answered, shifting his position on the bench. ‘And he thought I could manage to talk to a sorceress on my own.’

When Adia Bintaba looked back at him she was no longer smiling. ‘As it happens, I once attended one of Mondino de Liuzzi’s anatomy lessons dressed as a man. Now tell me why you have come to my house using a false name, magister, and what it is you want from me.’

XII

Eventually the boy came back with the two men he had sent for. Guido Arlotti put on his now dry clothes, gave the tunic back to the miller and thanked him. The boy held out a hand, asking for the coin he had been promised.

‘I told you that I’d give you another coin if you brought my friends quickly,’ said Guido, making short work of the lad. ‘Off you go, before I give you a kick in the arse for keeping me waiting so long.’

The customers and hangers-on who were standing around the mill laughed at the boy’s forlorn expression and an old man put a piece of bread in his hand as consolation. Guido was already on his way to Porta Galliera, almost at a run. He didn’t know how much time the physician would spend with the sorceress and wanted to catch them there together. ‘Where are we going?’ asked one of his accomplices.

‘Beyond the Circla,’ replied Guido, without slowing his pace. ‘We must find the wretch who pushed me into the canal.’

When he was eavesdropping at the window earlier, he had heard Mondino talk about a converted Arab sorceress. What ‘Converted’ meant, given that the woman exercised practices that were contrary to the Christian faith, remained to be seen. However, for now, the important thing was that he remembered perfectly where she lived: in the Bova area. There couldn’t be many Arabs in those parts. ‘Do we kill him?’

‘No. The person who’s paying me wants him alive. But he didn’t specify
how
alive.’

The others laughed. Guido often used them when he needed a helping hand. They were trustworthy, didn’t flinch at the toughest job and knew the value of discretion. ‘Are you armed?’

The man next to him lifted up the side of his coarse hemp tunic, showing the dagger that he kept hidden under the shirt next to his skin. The other simply nodded. ‘There will be a woman with him. A witch.’ He said it to see how they would react. He didn’t want them to run off at the crucial moment, terrified at the threat of some witch’s curse. The two were silent for a few seconds, then the first asked, ‘What’s she like?’ ‘I don’t know.’

The other man, who had been quiet until then, smiled. ‘Let’s hope she’s young and soft, and not some shrivelled old harlot. Does she have to stay alive too?’

Guido didn’t think that the Inquisitor would object if they had a bit of fun with the witch.

‘No,’ he answered. ‘She’s of no use to anyone.’ thinking about it, Mondino was a problem too, alive. He was an important man, a professor at the
Studium
, and he could report Guido and have him arrested. Arlotti knew well that if there were any trouble, the Inquisitor would not contradict the
comune
judges in order to defend him. It was up to him to save his own skin.

He thought about it for a while, but by the time they arrived at Porta Galliera, he had made his decision. He would kill Mondino too. Then he would tell the Inquisitor that he had been rumbled and had had to defend himself. Uberto da Rimini would be furious, but there wouldn’t be much he could do about it and he would just have to accept the fact.

At last a smile appeared on Guido’s face. The morning was turning out nice after all.

Adia Bintaba went to the chimney at the end of the room. She took a strangely shaped saucepan that was lying beside the embers and said, ‘I was forgetting my duties as the lady of the house. Please, would you accept a drink from my country?’

She poured an amber liquid from the saucepan into two tin cups and returned to the table. ‘It’s called
atay
,’ she said. ‘I’ve heard that it came to Arabia from distant China, centuries past. It’s very good for the health, clears the mind and fights the symptoms of poisoning.’

Mondino brought the cup to his lips and tried a sip. ‘It’s good too,’ he said, surprised. ‘Thank you. But where were we. I’ve no wish to seem rude, but the fact is that, for reasons that I can’t go into, I have very little time.’

He had told her everything. Beneath her expectant stare, he had admitted who he really was, said why he was there and what he was looking for. He had even told her about Wilhelm von Trier, although without going into too much detail and without mentioning the long list of criminal acts that he had carried out in the past few days. He instinctively trusted the woman, but prudence held him back.

Adia took a sip of
atay
, then another, with obvious pleasure. ‘Time is something we must use, not a thing to be used by,’ she said. ‘Otherwise it becomes a cage. Calm down and listen to me please.’ ‘I am.’

‘You want to know who managed to turn that German templar’s heart into a block of iron,’ said Adia. ‘The only thing I can tell you is that it is a distorted application of the principles of alchemy. It can bring no good. You must drop it.’

Mondino felt himself blush with irritation. He didn’t like her professorial tone one bit. ‘I don’t agree,’ he said, leaning an elbow on the table and looking her straight in the face. ‘The application is distorted because it has been used to commit murder, but the scientific knowledge necessary to obtain that transformation is in itself neither good nor bad.’

Adia sighed, as though he were a stubborn child. ‘I’ll give you an example. Let’s pretend for a moment that the aim of your life was to climb to the summit of a mountain, all right?’ ‘Certainly. Go on.’

‘You begin to climb. You suffer from the cold and from hunger. You have to escape from wild animals and brigands. On your way you come across huts belonging to shepherds and woodcutters who offer you hospitality and food. You pay them back by helping with their work and curing sickness since you are a physician, then you say goodbye and go on your way. Until the day when you finally discover that you are at the peak of the mountain. How do you feel?’

‘Satisfied, I imagine. But I don’t understand the meaning of the story, and as I told you I haven’t got much—’

‘I haven’t finished yet. On the other face of the mountain, there’s a man who has the very same objective as you. He begins to climb and to protect himself from the cold he steals some clothes and blankets from the first woodcutter he meets.

In order to eat, he kills some sheep, and when he is caught he kills the shepherd too. To combat solitude he rapes the shepherd’s widow and takes her with him for a few days, ignoring her pleas for mercy. Then he tires of her, abandons her in the middle of a wood and continues to climb. He meets other shepherds, other woodcutters, and takes something from each of them, often their lives, but without ever giving anything in return. One day he gets to the top of the mountain, at the very moment when you too arrive.’ Adia paused, looking him straight in the eye. ‘The result is the same, obtained at the same time. But now can you say that the way in which it was achieved is unimportant and that in both cases the aim is in itself neither good nor bad?’

Part of Mondino could not but admire the clarity with which Adia had illustrated her thoughts. But he couldn’t stand the fact that she had done it at his expense. He,
magister medicinae
who was famous and respected throughout Italy and even in France, had been made to look stupid by a woman. Out of pure stubborn pride, he refused to reply.

‘I am not here to discourse on philosophy, mistress,’ he said.

‘My original question was a different one. Do you know how it has been possible to make iron out of the blood and veins of a human being? And who might have done such a thing?’

Adia sighed again, almost ostentatiously. It seemed as though she simply wanted to make a fool of him.

‘Abu Ali al-Husain Ibn sina, who you know as Avicenna,’ she replied, ‘Said that the knowledge of something could not be called complete until its causes are known. Do you agree with that?’

‘Yes, but what’s that got to do with it?’

‘I can’t tell you much about the processes necessary to obtain the transmutation of human blood into iron and successively into gold, but—’

‘Into gold?’ broke in Mondino, sceptically.

‘Yes, into gold. Aren’t you a physician? then you must know the works of Jabir ibn Hayyan, the man you call Geber, of michael scot, Arnaldus de Villa nova, Albertus Magnus ...’

‘Of course I know them,’ said Mondino, offended. ‘But in the
Studium
, the more modern masters teach their students to take from alchemy only what is useful to medicine, discarding the rest. I personally tried michael scot’s formula to transform lead into gold and got nothing useful out of it at all.’

‘Really?’ said Adia. ‘And what did you do exactly?’

‘I followed his instructions step by step. I took the lead, I blended it three times with lime, red arsenic, sublimated vitriol and sweet alum, and then I immersed it in essence of seapurslane and wild cucumber. After which—’

‘The lead did not turn into gold,’ she interrupted. ‘And you concluded that the formula was false.’ ‘Precisely.’

‘Well, you are wrong.’

Mondino was beginning to get annoyed. Adia Bintaba might well be a scientist, but she showed the typical feminine tendency not to take facts into consideration, relying exclusively on her own ideas.

‘Something cannot be true if experience demonstrates that it is false,’ he replied, in a dry tone.

‘You really don’t understand, do you? you don’t see that the result doesn’t only depend on the formula, but on the person who is putting it into practice,’ she answered, exasperated. ‘And yet you are an intelligent man. In alchemy, scientific progress is the mirror of interior progress. An alchemist who has not perfected his personal qualities can follow formula and processes explained in books all he likes. He will never obtain a result.’

Mondino decided that the game had been going on long enough. ‘Listen, mistress Adia, I would love to sit here discussing these things with you, but I have already told you that I haven’t got time. Have you any idea how someone managed to kill the German templar in that barbarous fashion, or not?’

Adia burst out laughing and Mondino felt himself flare up.

His journey had been fruitless: he had wasted almost an entire morning of the two days he had left and he couldn’t sit there acting as laughing stock to that woman.

‘I most certainly do have an idea, yes,’ said Adia, when she had finished laughing. ‘I have been trying to expound it to you, but you won’t let me speak.’

‘I won’t let you speak? that’s a bit much.’ the woman looked austere. ‘That’s enough. I haven’t got all day. So either listen in silence or go.’

Mondino’s opinion of women scientists was falling rapidly. He wanted to turn and walk out of the house. But he forced himself to relax. He was there now, he might as well listen right to the end. ‘Go on,’ he said.

Adia gave him an ironic glance. ‘As I told you, this mystery will never become clear to you until you make yourself understand the causes. You must know that the way to the House of God, that is the perfection of the soul and the matter sought by alchemy, is not immovable. The point of arrival is always the same, but the paths to get there can be quite different, as in the example of the mountain that I gave you before. The most famous is the one that passes through the transmutation of base metals into gold.’ Mondino made as if to say something, but she stopped him with a sign of her hand. ‘To obtain such a result does not depend on reading a treatise and applying a formula, as you did. The transmutation of metals is like a scale. The higher the state of perfection the soul has reached, the closer the transmutation comes to success. Do you follow me?’

Mondino nodded and she went on: ‘As I told you, it is not possible for an impure soul to obtain perfect transmutation. However, there are those who don’t accept this, who want power for power’s sake, and who want to create
al-iksir
, what you call “the elixir of long life”, by forcing the progressive steps. They make pacts with obscure forces and even if they can’t reach perfection, they sometimes manage to obtain some power. For a brief moment they taste the illusion of victory, then inevitably, the power itself turns against them and kills them. To control the forces of nature, you need a soul in harmony with the universe. If the soul is closed, then the forces, once awoken, will crush it like a nut. Not out of wickedness, but because such is their nature.’

‘Come to the point, please,’ said Mondino.

‘I am convinced,’ said Adia, ‘That the man you are looking for has found a way of bringing human blood back to the first matter and successively turning it into iron. Then, from alchemical iron, a material that is very different from common iron, he might have managed to obtain gold.’

‘But didn’t you say that transmutation was not possible for an impure soul?’ asked Mondino, now interested despite himself.

‘Exactly. As long as the person is not helped by dark powers, as I said before. I think that is the reason for which the templar was killed. In such a perverse transmutation, death is probably an essential ingredient.’

Adia was talking about black magic tied to alchemy, using more precise arguments than those of Uberto da Rimini, but not dissimilar in substance. Mondino sat there in silence. His scientific mind was rebelling at the idea that such a thing could be possible, but the point wasn’t whether he believed it or not. The point was that someone else might have believed it. If that was the case, the two dead templars were nothing more than the efforts of a perverse alchemist to obtain the transmutation of metals and the idea of a trap or a vendetta fell apart. Gerardo was wasting his time looking for templars who had arrived in Bologna recently.

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