But then Ferron turned to his serving girl, who had knelt, silent and still as a statue, throughout Colon's presentation. Ferron slid back the veil from the girl's face.
It was, of course, Agnes. Her chin was bruised, her nose a little bloody. Her eyes were empty, unfocused, and a little drool laced her lips. It was clear she was drugged.
Harry knew he had no choice. Reluctantly, he stood. The Queen, de Santangel, even Colon, turned to him curiously.
Geoffrey plucked at his sleeve. 'In God's name sit down. We have won! There's no more to be said.'
But Harry shook him off. 'I must speak.' He turned to de Santangel, his head full of devastating arguments against Colon – not least the fact that some of his evidence was simple fakery, planted by Geoffrey and himself. He prepared to speak.
And Ferron's other Moorish companion, the tall woman, leapt to her feet. From beneath her loose white robes she produced a blade, long and sharp and polished.
With a strangled cry she hurled herself at the Queen. Isabel stared, with no time to react.
But as the woman's arm descended, as the blade fell towards the Queen's breast, Abdul Ibn Ibrahim threw himself between the killer and her target. He took the first strike in his arm, but he stayed on his feet and spun around, trying to get hold of the killer. His reward was another stabbing, this time in the chest. Blood spurted from the wound, frothy with air, and Abdul gurgled, as if drowning.
But the blade was caught, perhaps on Abdul's ribs, and the killer could not draw it out. The Holy Brothers, had time to fall on the assassin and club her to the ground.
The audience erupted in screams and panic, as bishops and nobles scrambled to get out of the room. Colon stood beside the monarch fiercely, protecting her with his bulk.
Harry ran to Agnes, and scooped her up in his arms. She was as limp as a puppet, her eyes rolling in her head. But she was alive.
He turned to see the Holy Brothers holding down the would-be killer. He got a clear view of her face for the first time.
Her skin darkened, her hair blackened, it was Grace Bigod.
XXVII
James saw the courtiers spilling out of the audience chamber. From his elevated viewpoint they boiled like ants over the ground. He grinned, and swept lower. If Grace and Ferron had arranged for the inquiry into Colon to come out into the open air to see his display in the sky, this was his cue.
But the crowd seemed disorderly. People were running away from the chamber – and likewise soldiers were running towards the mocked-up building. Even from up here he could hear screams. And now he saw a knot of the heavy-set brothers hustling out of the chamber, escorting a finely dressed woman who could only be the Queen. Something had gone wrong. Nobody was looking up. He would have to descend to see what was going on – and to make people look at him.
Tugging on his control lines he dipped his left wing, and banked that way. But then a gust of wind washed over the wing, and it pulled out of his grasp. He felt the machine slide further to the left, and the strengthening breeze made it impossible to pull the wing back. He fought with his control lines and kicked at his machine's tail. Struts snapped with sharp cracks.
And he slid into a tight spiral, spinning ever leftward, that drove him towards the ground. As the wind pushed back the skin of his face, as his speed rose and he spun like a leaf, he screamed in longing and fear: 'Grace, Grace!'
XXVIII
It was a huge relief for Harry to get out of the chaotic confines of the audience chamber and into the clear Spanish air. He still had his sister in his arms. Geoffrey stood by him, panting with shock and fear.
The army camp was in chaos. The attempt on Isabel's life had been like a stick thrust into a beehive. Soldiers ran everywhere. There were screams, and the crack of arquebuses. Muslims, who an hour ago had been able to go about their business unmolested, now ran for their lives. It was a grim irony, Harry thought, that it had been a Muslim who in fact had saved the Christian Queen, and a Christian who had tried to kill her.
'But I don't understand,' he said. 'I don't understand.'
'Evidently Grace didn't know of Ferron's scheme with Agnes,' Geoffrey said grimly. 'Our opponents didn't even trust each other! Grace saw she was losing the argument, Harry. She saw we were winning. And that couldn't be allowed. She was a woman who had come to need her murderous war, the glory of her weapons. She would even impersonate a Muslim, she would murder the greatest Christian queen, in order to win the argument – and to provoke needless slaughter.'
'And Abdul-'
'Abdul, in that flash as the blade descended towards Isabel, saw the opposite. The Moors are already defeated, here in Spain; Boabdil, for all he is despised, is doing a decent job of negotiating a surrender with honour. But if Isabel had been killed Fernando and his soldiers would have vented their fury on Granada. And in the east, the sultans would have responded to such a massacre as they have always threatened to do, beginning with reprisals against the Christians in Jerusalem, and against our holy sites.'
'And then the holy war would have been inevitable.'
'Yes. Abdul saw it all in a flash. He gave his life to save a Christian monarch, and to avert global disaster.'
'We have all spoken of such possibilities,' Harry said. 'But it was Abdul who acted.'
'He was a better man than either of us,' Geoffrey murmured, calming. 'He has saved countless lives, beginning with Isabel's. Perhaps he has saved the future.'
Something in the sky caught Harry's eye. It was like a bird, yet massive, more ungainly, high in the air. And it was spinning, spinning towards the ground, as if it had broken a wing.
'Is that a man? Is that James of Buxton? Are men meant to fly, Geoffrey?'
'If so, not here, not now.'
The fragile contraption, all struts and feathers, tumbled down, out of sight. It didn't seem to matter. Harry held Agnes close, murmuring to her, longing for her to wake from her drugged stupor.
EPILOGUE
I
There was much excitement around the harbour of Palos this August morning. The place was crowded with curious Christians, many still wearing their crusader shoulder flashes, and with Jews desperate to flee a country that had rejected them.
Harry and Geoffrey walked a good distance, pushing through the crowds, trying to get a glimpse of the explorers. In the end they climbed a steep slope, just outside the town, from which they could see the harbour and the three ships it cradled.
It was a modest fleet. There were the two caravels, called the Pinta and the Santa Clara, the latter more commonly known as the Nina after its owner, a man called Juan Nino. And there was the one larger carrack called the Santa Maria, but often called La Gallega as it had been built in Galicia. The Santa Maria carried square sails on a foremast and mainmast, and a triangular lateen sail on a mizzenmast at the rear. The Pinta was rigged like the Santa Maria, but the Nina relied on lateen sails. The two caravels especially were graceful, slim little ships.
In these last minutes before they cast off Harry could see the figures of the crew loading their ships, bustling around the decks and the stout castles at prow and stern. The men looked somehow too large for their ships, which were only some fifty or sixty feet long; they were terribly tiny ships to challenge a world ocean. Harry remembered Abdul telling him that the rudders on some Chinese vessels were almost the size of a ship like the Nina.