Authors: Fiona McIntosh
They both chuckled at the metaphor.
âLooks can be deceiving, Brother Josse. I can assure you I am much older than you.'
âBut â' and something in the look Fynch gave him told Josse to leave it. There was no reprimand, no irritation in Fynch's expression, just a soft glance that seemed almost painful to behold, so Josse looked away and accepted that the mystery would always remain so. âWell, you are an inspiration.'
Fynch smiled. âI'm sure you would like to know why I'm here after all this time.'
Josse sat forward, placing his half-full cup of gleam on the small knobbly table that sat between them. He noticed Fynch's gleam was untouched. âYes, I would. I'm intrigued.'
âI need the aid of the Brotherhood.'
Josse looked surprised. âBut you know we are here only in the service of the Crown?'
âI do.' Fynch eyed him now and the golden glints in his eyes seemed to glow even brighter. âTell me about the man in the forest.'
âCassien? Of all our men, why him?'
âBecause you were asked to prepare him.'
Josse looked astonished. âBut those were secret instructions, from the desk of â'
âThe royal chancellor. Yes, I know and I'm sorry for the stratagem. It would have prompted too many questions had I approached you directly on this matter when you took over as Head Brother.' Fynch gave a small shrug of a shoulder. âI know it's confusing, Brother Josse. Tell me all you know about him. And then I'll tell you why he is so important to me.'
Josse sat back and took a deep breath. âAll right. Cassien came to us as an infant ⦠an orphan. His mother was a slattern.' He paused as Fynch smiled tightly at the polite word. Josse cleared his throat. âShe was nonetheless incredibly beautiful, and it was said rich men from far and wide would journey to see and partake of this woman's ⦠er â¦'
âServices?' Fynch offered.
âYes,' Josse agreed, relieved to discover that his guest was not stuffy about these things, even though he'd always thought of him as something of a holy man. âShe lived and worked in Pearlis, not far from the cathedral. She died neither young nor old â in her prime perhaps you might say, ravaged by a disease that no-one had any knowledge of, or cure for. It is believed the sickness was brought from across the oceans, and her body was burned as it frightened everyone so. Cassien knows none of this. He believes his mother died soon after childbirth. She gave him to us when he was little more than nine months. I have to say her attitude sounds cold, but I met her and she was a warm, laughing individual who wanted the best for her son, which she knew she could not give him. I never visited her. She accepted no money for him, asking only that she be allowed to glimpse him from time to time.'
âAnd did she?'
âEvery moon until she died. We would take Cassien through the market and past a designated spot where she would be watching him from a close distance. I always felt sorry for her, even though she'd given her child away. There was only ever tenderness and love in that beautiful face of hers. I gave her my word that her son would never know.'
âThe father?'
âAccording to her he was a traveller, a wastrel. She loved him, apparently. He was rarely home from what we learned. Again, I never met him.'
âThere were brothers, weren't there?'
âAn elder brother,' he corrected. âI never saw him and I have no idea of his life.'
âGo on.'
âWell, the young Cassien charmed us all from his arrival. He was an agile, bright-eyed infant with great curiosity and the sharpest of minds. We all loved him. I most of all, I suspect. I taught him all that I could and ensured that he had the best training. He didn't disappoint. As he grew he showed himself to be the most adept and willing student. Everything he turned his hand to he did well.' Josse reached for his spiced wine again. He knew it had cooled but he didn't mind. His voice became scratchy when he talked for long periods. Fynch's drink remained untouched.
âThe Brotherhood has a knack for finding each of its members' special talents, does it not?'
âIndeed, Master Fynch. We pride ourselves on it. Some of our Brothers become specialists at negotiation, while others are skilled poisoners; some have a talent for inciting political instability, while a few down the years have shown a gift for subterfuge and all manner of clandestine activity from spying to assassination.' He shrugged. âIt just depends on the individual. We nurture all skills and then we choose which to focus on for a particular individual.' Josse sighed. âOnly a few know of our existence â most think we are a small religious sect â but we are at the Crown's disposal, always ready to meet its needs. We are looked after by the Crown.'
âAnd yet you live quietly as monks ⦠frugal, spiritual even.'
Josse nodded. âIt cannot be any other way or these skilled men could be turned to the wrong side for money or status. Emperor Cailech set us up in this manner. His aim was for us to Opérate as a religious Brotherhood, and ensure our members make their commitment to the Crown as a monk might make his to his god. It is definitely a spiritual undertaking.'
âYes, Cailech was inspired in this creation. And you have not let him down.' Josse nodded his head, pleased with the compliment. âAnd what of Cassien?' Fynch continued. âWhat is his speciality?'
âAh, he could have gone several ways. However, Cassien has become something of a one-man army.' Josse laughed but there was no mirth in it. âHe is a living, breathing weapon.'
âPlease explain that to me, Brother Josse.'
âQuite simply: I defy any man to be his equal in combat. He can run faster, longer, harder than anyone in the empire, I suspect. He can take uncharted levels of pain. His stamina, thinking speed and range of thought are immense â and by that I mean his strategic decisions are usually always right and they are made in a blink, even under pressure. He is strong, flexible and supple; light as air if he needs to be. If you blindfold him, he can still “see” because his senses are so finely tuned. He has developed a method of bouncing sound off hard objects to gauge his nearness to them.' Josse gave a tight smile. âJust as a bat might,' he added and frowned.
âWhat is it, Brother Josse?'
âThere is something else about Cassien that I don't know how to explain.'
Josse watched Fynch lean forward slightly. âYes?'
He shook his head. âIt's an intangible skill. One I cannot put competently into words, but it's as though he possesses an otherworldly sense that the rest of us don't know or understand. I know he keeps it secret.'
âYou mean it is an inherent part of him.'
âExactly. He alone owns it, wields it, but I know not when or how. He has only admitted once to me of its existence, when he was a child, and even then he could barely explain it. I suspect he's forgotten ever mentioning it.'
He watched Fynch's eyes blaze now. âMagic?'
Josse felt genuinely uncomfortable. He cleared his throat, sipped his gleam. âThere is no other explanation, I suppose.'
âWhen did you last see him?'
âMe? I haven't seen Cassien for a decade. Our man, Loup, visits him each new moon to put him through various, shall we say, tests. And he is certainly rigorous, Master Fynch.'
âAnd?'
âHe is astonishing. Two moons ago Cassien bested Loup for the first time. Loup tells me he now believes our charge to be near enough invincible in a one-on-one fight. We believe he could do a lot of damage to any enemy if he was sent in alone. One of his strengths is his quiet presence. Loup says there are times when â¦' Josse trailed off, unsure how to say it, for it sounded so far-fetched.
Fynch's head snapped up from where he had been staring thoughtfully at the fire. âWhen what?'
âEr ⦠well, when he believes Cassien is somehow not entirely of this world.'
He watched Fynch straighten, his chest swell as though it was being filled with anticipation and excitement. âThis is very good news, Brother Josse.'
âIs it? Frankly, it frightens me, this talk of magic.'
âOne must not fear magic, Brother Josse.' His guest stood, contemplating. âGood â¦' Fynch murmured. âVery good.'
âSo, this mission you mention suggests the Crown has a specific use for him, Master Fynch?'
âIt does.'
âThen by all means ask the palace to â'
âNo. This is the most secret mission that any of your men will ever undertake because they will do so without the knowledge of the Crown.'
Josse shook his head. âI don't understand.'
âYou don't have to. I promise you, he will be working for the good of the realm, for the empire it is part of and for the young royal who presides over it.'
Josse blinked.
âYou trust me, Brother Josse?'
âI do,' he replied without hesitation.
âThank you. I will personally brief Cassien.'
âOf course. You will need a guide. Loup will take you.' There was a soft knock at the door. âAh, perfect timing. We can offer a hearty vegetable stew with chesil manchets baked here in our own bakery. We prefer the grainiest of bread ⦠I hope it suits.'
Fynch smiled. âBread is a rare treat in whichever form it is given to me. Thank you.'
Josse pointed to a basin nearby and heard the sound of Fynch washing his hands as he opened the door to young Turc, who brought in two bowls of stew, vapour rising enthusiastically from the brew, and bread still so warm he could smell its escaping steam. A chunk of butter he knew had been churned only the previous day was scattered with salt flakes.
His guest was taking an inordinately long time to dry his hands and Josse realised Fynch did not want to be seen.
âLeave the tray, Turc. Thank you, lad. I can take it from here.'
Gabe had half an hour to kill before Reynard arrived. He paused at the sideboard where the swan quill sat in its box and traced a finger over the feather, watching the individual spines part and then flick back into a soldierly line.
He remembered that Angelina had a sweet tooth and realised he had time to nip out and grab some simple fruit pastries drizzled with white icing, plus a new bag of his favourite coffee beans. He liked a strong roast that hinted of chocolate and licorice, and having invested in a 15bar Italian coffee machine, he enjoyed the ritual of making his coffee to order.
He thought again about Angelina and Reynard's peculiar possessiveness about her. And then he remembered the note.
Hell!
He'd left the café yesterday and hurried back to the shop, only to get sucked into a black hole of new stock and paperwork, and had forgotten about Angelina's piece of paper, which she'd pushed into his hand surreptitiously.
As soon as he was back at the apartment he threw down his packets from the bakery and dipped into the pocket where the note had been stuffed. He smoothed it out on the kitchen table and read it.
Don't trust him! He is lying to you! Trust only me and what I say!
The three exclamations made her warning look desperate. So her fear was about the physician.
He is lying to you!
Why would Reynard lie? Lying about what? He presumed he was soon to find out more.
He set out the pastries and put some background music on very softly. It was melodic guitar music, nothing too Latin and upbeat but nothing melancholy either.
At just a minute or so to eleven he heard the security buzzer sound.
âReynard ⦠Angelina?'
âGood morning, Gabriel,' Reynard's disconnected voice said through the loudspeaker. âThank you for your emailed directions.'
âJust push the door,' Gabe replied and hit the button to let them enter. He walked outside his flat to the landing, where he'd put a chair for Reynard. It was cold and, even though it felt churlish, he didn't care. He was not permitting the physician inside while he was assessing Angelina. He leaned over the elegant wrought-iron railing that twisted serpentine-like around the shallow white marble stairs between floors and heard the lift crank into use. The lift took its time in its creaky ascent but finally it opened and there they were, the oddest couple.
Reynard was dressed in his habitual pinstripe suit while Angelina looked wan in a short skirt, ankle boots, thick tights, a duffel coat, scarf, gloves, beanie ⦠it was as though she was a child being dressed by a protective grandmother against the elements.
âHello again,
Monsieur
Reynard, Angelina,' he said warmly to both, but looking at her.
They stepped out of the lift.
âSo how do we do this?' Reynard asked. He looked nervous.
âI've put a chair here,' Gabe said, gesturing toward the landing's window. âIt's cold but you're well wrapped up, I see. Did you bring a book?'
âI'll be fine,' Reynard replied. âHow long?'
âI'd say we need at least forty-five minutes undisturbed.' He gave a sympathetic grin but his tone was firm. âI can offer you coffee?'
âI understand. And no, but thank you. I've recently had one,' Reynard said.
âAngelina, will you follow me, please?' Gabe offered. She nodded.
Reynard touched his arm. âBe careful, Gabriel. Remember my warning,' he whispered.
Gabe looked over his shoulder with a quizzical frown. âWe'll be fine,' he assured Reynard. He closed the door on the physician and turned to the young woman. âIt's warm in here so feel free to take off your coat and put it down over there,' he said, pointing to the sofa. He left it entirely to her. But it pleased him to see that she began peeling off her heavy garments. It was a good start. He turned away. âNow, how about a decent coffee?'
She shook her head, dark eyes regarding him far from suspiciously. In fact, he'd describe her look as hungry but not for food. He convinced himself he was imagining it and decided that she was probably relieved to be away from Reynard's supervision.