Casca grinned. "Old man, thou art a hypocrite."
The gleam came back into Omar Khayyam's brown eyes, and he quoted: '"I am myself with yesterday's sev'n thousand years.'"
"All right. I get the picture."
"Besides, O savage Kasim," the young Arab added, "it would not be wise to run wine through the alembic in the heart of Baghdad. One mayest expect that even there where the odors are many the, ah, 'perfume' of the alembic would attract attention."
"So you come out here where you'll be alone to 'improve your wine' and do your drinking?"
"A crude way to put it, sir, a crude way." The more Khayyam talked the more sober he seemed to get. "But thou hast put a small handle on the vessel of truth."
Truth. Something in Casca's mind took him back in time… back to a courtroom scene… Pilate, fat Pilate the Roman judge… What is truth? the cynical Pilate had said. The cynicism in Omar Khayyam's eyes was gentler, more civilized… laced with a friendly merriment.
"What is truth?" Casca asked him. This time it was Omar Khayyam who grinned and then quoted gleefully:
"'Myself when young did eagerly frequent, Doctor and saint and heard much argument, About it and about that, but evermore, Came out by the same door by which in I went.'" The young Arab passed the "wine" again.
All in all a very pleasant way to be welcomed back to the world of the living. Casca found he liked the worldly-wise and civilized "Tentmaker." He was, indeed, an excellent drinking companion.
And at night, when he showed Casca the stars in the clear skies of Persia, he was obviously a very good astronomer. Much of what he had to say was beyond Casca's understanding — and not much use to the scar-faced one, either. When would he need to recognize Algol and Deneb and Betelgeuse?
The shooting stars, though That first night not just one, but three bloomed briefly in the night sky at the same time, and Omar Khayyam laughed at Casca's excitement.
"Not unusual at all. In fact, sometime this month there may even be a 'shower' of them."
"What are they?"
"Ah…! Well, those that hit the earth-"
"Hit the earth?"
"Yes. I have never seen one myself, nor known anyone who has, but the ancient writings speak of a few men who have seen these flame across the sky and land — and where they landed there would be a glowing hot stone no larger than a grape."
"Anybody ever been hit by one of these?"
Omar Khayyam laughed. "There is no record of that ever happening."
"And all the time I thought they were a sign of good luck." Casca remembered the shooting star that night in Mamud's slave coffle and his feeling that something important was going to happen to him. Somehow that brought to his mind Hassan — because the shooting star had been over the Elburz Mountains. "'Tis said that you were a friend of Hassan al Sabah."
"Yes." In the darkness his face was not visible, but Casca caught an odd, wistful tone in his voice. "And of Nizam al Mulk, too. When we were young men we swore undying allegiance to each other. We were all young, then. The whole world was young."
"And now?"
"Now is yesterday's tomorrow."
"Bu Ali?" Omar Khayyam asked.
It was either the second or the third night that Casca asked about him.
"Yes."
"Ah…! The big Mameluke bodyguard. The favored of the Jasmine Lady."
"Baghdad?"
"Baghdad."
Now Casca knew Bu Ali's whereabouts — and also the significance of the Jasmine Lady.
It was time someone paid for his suffering…
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
When Bu Ali had returned to Castle Alamut and stood before the Master his legs turned to water and his bowels threatened to let go of their control. Hassan said nothing for a long, long time. Simply sat upon the cushions behind a low table inlaid with mother of pearl. He too accepted fate for what it was. The loss of Kasim was not the fault of Bu Ali. It would serve him nothing to punish the man. As for Kasim, now it seemed he would never know if he had been close to the truth. If indeed Kasim was the spawn of Satan, then not even the fall into the bowels of the earth would kill him and one day, one year, one century he would return. If he was not the Roman, then there was no loss, only another man dead and of no real importance to his plans. He would continue as would the Brotherhood.
To Bu Ali he said, using the tones only a father would use on a well-loved son who had done his best but failed at an assignment, "Return to Baghdad."
Bu Ali was ready to do anything the Master ordered but said, "Lord, there is the problem of explaining my absence to Mamud the slaver."
Hassan rose to his feet and went to the window and looked out over the high mountains.
"Mamud and the other Mamelukes who were with you will be no more by the time you reach the city. I will have other work for you there."
Bu Ali knew he'd been dismissed and already other more important things were on the mind of the Old Man of the Mountain. He left the presence of Hassan al Sabah feeling like one whose life had hung by the merest thread, as indeed it had. The next morning Hassan had his eldest son strangled to death for failing him in a mission and for the drinking in public of forbidden wine. He could have other sons but the discipline he demanded must be enforced upon everyone equally, for he was a fair man.
Baghdad. Casca set out for it on the back of the ass that had been left behind. By now the two of them had gotten to know each other very well, and while the back of the ass didn't afford the most comfortable ride, it beat walking. Casca was wearing the oversized robes of the fat monk. He grinned when he thought of what he must look like, and he wondered what kind of reception he would get from the guards at the gate, but he was dead serious when he thought of what he intended doing to Bu Ali. So, if entering Baghdad as an infidel monk riding on an ass was going to be an act of foolhardiness, why let it. He had been pushed around long enough. Now he was going to strike back — and nothing or nobody was going to get in his way.
He had really enjoyed his "vacation" with Omar Khayyam. Casca was not much for poetry, but he could see how one could hide a message in the fancy verses and say things that one could never get said otherwise.
Khayyam had also brought him up to date — more or less — on what was happening. Hassan al Sabah's power was growing day by day, and the Golden Dagger was feared not only in Islam but in Frankish circles, too. As for the Franks — what the Muslims called all Europeans — they were becoming more aggressive about their right to visit Jerusalem. There were frequent clashes with Muslim groups. Actually there was something close to an undeclared war going on. Omar Khayyam had been particularly dubious about Casca wearing the monk's robes since there was talk that this group, originally set up to aid Frankish pilgrims to and from Jerusalem, was to become a military order. Khayyam even knew the intended name: the Hospitallers. But Casca figured he would just take his chances.
Something up ahead bothered him. He was approaching a low rise (one of the many in this terrain) and the other side was hidden to him. Casca hunkered down on the ass, outwardly careless, inwardly alert.