‘I needed no authority. Karp had attached himself to my troops in the guise of a cook, and he was under my command. It was enough that he was preaching disobedience, not only to Mother Church but to military authority and to natural order. He would have my men lay down their arms and renounce all violence. They were to call themselves “dear to God”, and trust to prayer. That was sedition. So I stopped his mouth. I made an example of him so that others should take warning.’
‘And how did he come to lose his nose and ears as well?’
Chabrillan gave a shrug as if Hector’s question was superfluous. ‘When Kandia fell, the Turks allowed us to leave unmolested. I took Karp with me as a slave, intending to keep him as an oarsman on my galley. I felt that his punishment was not yet served out. Later he tried to run away. He lost his ears and nose for that. My comite carried out the sentence.’
‘Piecourt is dead,’ said Hector flatly.
‘Then he will have his just reward,’ replied Chabrillan. ‘He always followed the true doctrine of the Christ, of the Gospel, and the Apostles.’
‘And the scars on your feet? How did you suffer them?’
‘In Christ’s service,’ answered the Chevalier grimly. Deliberately and rudely, he looked at the wall over Hector’s head. ‘The Venetians had agreed secretly that I alone of all the defenders of Kandia was to be handed over to the Turks. The infidels wished to take revenge for an earlier incident in my struggle against them. They mistook Karp for my personal slave and arranged that he dress my wounds after they had finished with me.’
‘Is that when you first met Hakim Reis?’
Hector’s question had a remarkable effect. Chabrillan dropped his gaze and stared hard at Hector. The Chevalier’s supercilious manner had been replaced by a long, calculating appraisal of his visitor. After a lengthy pause he said softly, ‘I thought that it was the Cohens in Algiers who had betrayed me.’
‘The Cohens had nothing to do with it. They probably do not even know that you were taken prisoner from the St Gerassimus or where you are now.’
‘Then who wrote that letter promising our escape?’
‘It was prepared here in Meknes.’
Chabrillan’s eyes searched Hector’s face. Hector could tell that the Chevalier was struggling to work out the events of the past few days. ‘Then Karp was the mischief-maker. But I don’t remember that he ever laid eyes on Hakim Reis. And it is strange that he knew Hakim is expected soon in Sallee. From Kandia onwards Karp has been nothing more than a mute beast, pulling an oar.’
‘It was not Karp who prepared the letter,’ Hector assured him. ‘He recognised you by the scars on your feet, and identified you as the Lion of La Religion, but nothing more. As for Hakim Reis, no one knows when he will next visit Sallee.’
‘Yet the message said that Hakim Reis would be waiting to pick me up.’
Hector decided that this was his moment to press forward. The Chevalier was off guard and might be shocked into a confession. He watched for his reaction as he said, ‘I needed to confirm that you had dealt with Hakim Reis in the past and that you would expect him to connive at your escape. I had to be sure of my evidence.’
Chabrillan did not move a muscle. His eyes never left Hector’s face as he asked, ‘And what evidence was that?’
‘First, the gunpowder in the magazine. It is a special pistol powder, impossible to manufacture in Barbary. It was not damaged or damp as if it had been captured at sea. The powder was in a keg, in perfect condition, fresh from the makers. I had seen similar kegs aboard the St Gerassimus. The gun founder Sean Allen said that the gunpowder had come from Hakim Reis, who in turn may have got it from a smuggler called Tisonne. That was when I first heard the name. Later a friend of mine, working in Moulay’s armoury, came across some shoddy muskets made for the export market. Again the gun founder said that he had obtained the weapons from Hakim Reis.’ Hector waited for several seconds before adding, ‘I presume you got those marks on your cheek when a faulty musket barrel exploded in your face. Were you giving a demonstration of the weapon, and did Hakim accept the shipment?’
For a moment Hector thought he had broken through Chabrillan’s calm detachment. The Chevalier moved a hand as if to touch the scatter of blue specks on his cheek, but then changed his mind.
‘I shared an oar bench with a man with exactly that colour of mark on his cheek,’ Hector added. ‘He is marked with the letters GAL for galerien. He had told me that when the brand was first scorched into his flesh, it was made permanent by rubbing gunpowder in the fresh burn.’
‘You seem to have an abundance of low-life friends,’ Chabrillan remarked witheringly.
‘Someone else said that to me recently,’ Hector acknowledged, but then moved on. ‘It was not until I learned that tisonne is a word for a horse with a spotted skin that I made the connection. My guess is that Hakim Reis gave you that cover name, and that you enjoyed the coincidence that tizon is also the name for a weapon which the heroic El Cid wielded against Muslims.’
‘You have a very vivid imagination,’ said Chabrillan. It was evident that he had regained his composure fully. ‘Why should it matter to you that I am this Tisonne. I am held in this cell because I am a knight of the Order of St Stephen of Tuscany, not because weapons and gunpowder reached Meknes.’
‘I will come to that in a moment,’ Hector answered him. ‘But there is something else which must come first, something more important than arms smuggling.’
‘Please continue.’ Chabrillan’s voice dripped with sarcasm.
‘Hakim Reis has the reputation of a lucky man. He always seems to be at the right place and at the right time. His galley intercepts merchant shipping with uncanny accuracy, and he is first on the scene when a peace treaty breaks down and a Barbary state reverts to piracy. It is as if someone highly placed in the councils of his victims is supplying him with vital information. I believe that informant was you.’
‘And why should I do that?’
‘That is what I did not understand until you told me why you had Karp’s tongue removed: you nurse a violent hatred for those who you see as enemies of your Church, whoever they are, whether Muslims or dissenters. You would damage them in whatever way you can.’
Hector could feel Chabrillan’s arrogance returning. It was like a physical force radiating from the aristocrat, his absolute certainty that his cause was correct, and that his breeding and privilege placed him above others.
‘As a turncoat you would not understand,’ Chabrillan said, his voice contemptuous. ‘Christendom will prevail. But first it must cure itself of the heresies within. That is where the real and present danger lies. Schismatics and agnostics gnaw at the heart of Mother Church. Men like Karp must be rooted out. Nations who would question the authority of Rome must be put to flight. Only then should we turn our full attention to the Eternal War.’
‘And is that why you allied yourself with Hakim Reis?’ Hector spoke quietly. He knew now that Chabrillan’s self-belief was his weakness.
‘Consider where Hakim Reis operates – in the Atlantic, where he encounters ships from the trading nations of the north, from protestant nations. His activities and the attacks of corsairs like him weaken these nations and distract them from rivalry with the Holy Mother Church. The arms and gunpowder he brings to Moulay are used to drive the English from Tangier. A share of the money he receives, from the slaves and cargoes he captures and the arms he provides, goes to good purpose. Through me it has built galleys for La Religion, strengthened fortifications, and holds back the Turk.’