said.
‘Well, I’m a filthy sort of priest. Anyhow Aethelmaer’s laborious mechanical sketching would have gone no further when he died, if not for my “stealing”. Am I not honouring his legacy, by trying to pursue the designs he left?
‘And, “gadgets”? You make them sound like toys. These are engines, Orm. Engines of war - and, perhaps, of peace. Come now. Let me show you.’ Sihtric spurred his horse forward.
Orm, overwhelmed, followed.
XI
Robert and Moraima walked out of the mosque into dazzling daylight.
They headed down to the river, where waterwheels turned with a creak of wooden gears - Moraima said the wheels were called norias - and boats with colourful sails steered through the arches of the Roman bridge. On the bank, amid a clinking of coins, vendors sold food and water and parasols.
Moraima said, ‘You were affected by the mosque, weren’t you? Not everybody is. I think you’re deep, Robert son of Orm.’
‘Am I?’ He laughed. ‘Well, maybe compared to Ghalib and Hisham.’
‘Now you’re being jealous, and that’s not deep. I can’t always tell what you’re thinking, though. What you’re feeling.’
He thought it over. ‘My time in Spain - I didn’t know what to expect. That journey down through the country, the emptiness, the heat ...’ He was shy about this, but he tried to express himself. ‘And when I walk into these marvellous places, the mosque, the palace - something inside me - it’s like a bird fluttering in my chest.’
She astonished him by placing her hand over his. ‘My father said you would be like this. You have your father’s muscles, but the soul of your mother.’
‘Whose soul does he say you have?’
‘His sister’s. My aunt, Godgifu, who died before either of us was born. And who loved your father, Orm.’
That was a shock. ‘I knew nothing of that.’
She looked at him directly. ‘Do you think love can cross generations?’
Confused, he turned away. ‘I didn’t come here for love. I came here because of my father’s business with yours.’
‘Yes. Our fathers are both veterans of Hastings, and I suppose something like that shapes you for ever. But the past is dead, gone, and they are old men. Who cares about our fathers’ business? We are young. We are the future.’
He looked at her. ‘You’re talking about us.’
‘What about us?’
He sighed, faintly irritated. ‘There you go again. You drop hints, and when I respond you turn away and go all coy.’
She smiled. ‘Don’t tell me you don’t like it. Would you like there to be an us?’
He gazed at her, hot in his tunic of English wool. ‘You know I would, or you wouldn’t talk like this.’
She said, ‘But...’
‘But we’re so different. Muslim and Christian!’
‘There are ways around that. The People of the Book are tolerated here.’
He grunted. ‘Not in England, they’re not. And you’re becoming a scholar, as far as I can see. While I will never be anything but a soldier.’
‘There’s plenty of work for soldiers in Spain,’ she said.
He smiled. ‘Let’s keep it simple. Do you think it would be a sin before God or Allah if I kissed you?’
‘We could always find out.’ She stepped towards him. Her skin was the smoothest surface he had ever seen, utterly flawless, and as her full lips parted he could smell the subtlest spice, a pepper perhaps.
But there was a rude cry. ‘Hey, Christian! Take a look!’ It was Ghalib.
XII
Orm paced out the mighty weapon.
The body of the shaft was forty paces long, perhaps two wide, and mounted on three axles. The bow itself, twenty paces from tip to tip, was made of wood layers, finely cut and polished, that ran in smooth, pleasing curves, gleaming in the intense sunlight. It was like a section of a boat, perhaps, or a monstrous piece of furniture.
‘You’ve used arbalests,’ Sihtric called. ‘Tell me about them.’
‘The bow is usually made of metal.’
‘Not here. We couldn’t cast such an immense
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