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Joan said, 'So we share common goals, my family and your order.'

'Oh, yes.'

'So what do you think we should do about this, Thomas?'

'You could write to this cousin in Cordoba, or travel there. Or you could come to England – perhaps we could bring her there.'

Joan frowned. 'The Muslims would have us out of Jerusalem for good. It's not the best time to leave, chasing a dream. And I'm not sure if writing back to my Moorish cousin about this matter is advisable. For now, let us study the matter further. Subh can wait.' But she frowned again at her letter. 'You know, there are so many puzzles here. Thomas, what of this phrase, Incendium Dei?'

Thomas said, 'Something Subh's own ancestress, Moraima, evidently remembers of the lost Codex.'

"'The Fire of God."'

'More than "fire",' Thomas said. 'It is a word with passion. It means conflagration. Ruin. Perhaps it is a phrase associated with the bit of the manuscript from which Robert tore his corner…'

A thought occurred to him. He pawed through his notes once more, looking for the transcription of the ripped-through phrase with the coded words. All those incomplete letters, I, V, M – was it possible that Subh's Latin phrase would complete that puzzle?

But he was exhausted by the heat. With apologies to Joan, promising to discuss all this further, he gathered up his documents and made his way to bed, his head buzzing with the enigma of the Incendium Dei, the Fire of God.

XIII

Among Subh's many admirable qualities was an antipathy to wasting time. And so, on only his second day in Seville, Peter was to meet Moorish scholars who would inspect the fragmentary weapons plans he had retrieved from the wreckage of the schemes of long-dead Sihtric.

He was in no state for this, with his hair and skin caked with dust and his clothes stiff with stale sweat. At Subh's suggestion, or perhaps it was an order, he took a bath, Moorish style. For the price of an English penny he had the dirt scraped and sweated out of his skin, he was shaved and his hair chopped back, and he had the ache of the mule ride kneaded out of his back by a masseur, a huge Moor with biceps like a bull's thighs.

When he got back to Subh's house he found his own clothes had been taken away for mending and cleaning, to be replaced by a set of clean, crisp white robes that would have suited any Moor. There was even a turban.

'My,' Subh said, when she met him at the gate. 'Has your skin been oiled? You even smell civilised.'

His head full of her perfume, he could only reply, 'Lady, I'll take that as a compliment.' He offered her his arm.

They walked the short distance to Seville's royal palace, which the Moors called the al-qasr al-Mubarak, the Blessed Palace. Somehow it didn't surprise Peter at all that Subh was held in high enough esteem by the emir to have been granted the use of rooms in his palace to meet her scholars.

They were met by one of the emir's staff, a sleek chamberlain with a scalp shaved smooth and polished oak-brown. He led them on a gentle walk through the rooms of the palace, which led from one to the other in the indirect Moorish style, filled with water-reflected light from patios and gardens. In some of the rooms they glimpsed people at leisure, wives and princes perhaps, and palace staff who worked on the business of running the emirate.

'I'm impressed you organised this so quickly,' he said.

'We may need to be hasty, if the rumours I've been hearing about the Christians' plans are true. We have a few years at best before Seville is besieged the way Cordoba was. So we must get on with it. But tell me – do you despair of the quality of our scholars in these latter days? After all the great age of the caliphate is long gone.'

'Not at all. I have studied Ibn Rushd, for instance, whom we know as Averroes. An astronomer, physician, philosopher, who is generally believed to have produced the best commentary on Aristotle since antiquity, and stirred up some trouble with it. Ibn Bajjah, a teacher of medicine, and tutor of Ibn Rushd. Al-Jayyani, who wrote commentaries on Euclid. Al-Maghribi, famous for trigonometry. Al-Zarqali, the foremost astronomer-'

'Enough. You have convinced me. You know,' she mused, 'these scholars are heroes to you. But my son's heroes are men like Tariq and Saladin. Warriors. Makes you think.'

'I'll tell you something else about Muslim learning. Many Arabic words have no Latin equivalents, because the scholarship is so much more advanced. So when the work of Ibn Rushd, for instance, is translated into Latin, the Arabic words are copied over as they are. Alkali. Camphor. Borax. Elixir. Algebra. Azure. Zenith. Nadir. Zero. Cipher-'

'Enough of your lists, boy!'

'Do you think that people in England and Germany will end up speaking Arabic without even knowing it?'

'Now that,' she said, 'is a delicious thought.'

They arrived at last at a patio with an elaborate sunken garden surrounded by graceful arches. Peter heard laughter, and in the shadowed spaces beyond he saw lithe running figures. At the western side of the patio they were brought through an elaborate horseshoe-arched doorway into a hall called the turayya. This grand hall was the emir's throne room; beneath a domed roof pillars of fine marble supported complex arcades. The chamberlain said it was named for the star system called in the west the Pleiades. It was so called because the rooms around this central hall were set out like those stars in the sky.

Peter's eye was drawn to the tile work which adorned the lower walls. A pattern of black stars, rich blue rectangles and white strips, repeating endlessly, somehow covered every scrap of the surface. 'I think I could spend my whole life,' Peter said, 'just looking at the tiles on that wall.'

'I'm afraid I have other plans for you,' Subh said. 'Enough gawping. Come now and sit with me.'

He joined her on floor cushions, and allowed a servant to pour him a glass of the juice of crushed oranges, as they waited for the first of their scholarly guests to come and talk of engines of war.

XIV

AD 1244

It was two years before Joan and Saladin saw Thomas again. They were years in which troubles more urgent than the vague promises of prophecies rose up and overwhelmed them – and, at last, after generations, the family of Robert the Wolf was forced to flee from Jerusalem.

Saladin thought of England as home, for this was the birthplace of his ancestor Robert; this was where his family had its deepest roots. But to a boy from the Outremer it was a strange, dark place. The sun never seemed to climb high in the sky, and was somehow dim even at noon. And Saladin felt cold, cold to his bones.

But as their ship sailed cautiously up a great estuary and into London he clung to the rail, staring out curiously at a city that sprawled across the horizon. Even the river was crowded, busy with trade, and upstream of a grim fortress called the Tower wooden cranes like long-necked birds pecked at ships laden with English wool, or with silk and wine coming into the country from the continent.

Thomas Busshe met them off the ship. Saladin was glad to see a familiar face in this strange country. Thomas had arranged lodgings for them for the night at a Franciscan priory. He had aged in the two years since their last meeting, and walked with a limp. But he seemed excited and pleased to see them – indeed, bursting with news, as he led them into the city.

As they walked, it was the filth that struck Saladin. All the narrow streets just ran with human sewage. And butchers worked out in the street, making the cobbles a mess of offal and bone fought over by rats and crows and bloody-handed urchins. Though squads of beadles, under-beadles and rakers swept gutters and drains clear of dung and hauled animal remains to the rivers for dumping, the stench of ordure and blood was overwhelming.