Djoura was suddenly aware that Raphael was taller than she was. And the awkward, gangling Pinkie of her memory had to crumble before the presence before her, that held her hands in a grip no longer cold.
“And because you sing, Djoura,” he continued, as though he had not been interrupted. “When I was newly a⦠a slave and I tried to refuse this life, I heard you singing.”
In a small voice, very unlike herself, Djoura said, “I only did that to bother the woman sellers.”
“You did it beautifully,” Raphael insisted. “It was the voice of⦠of Allah, to me. It still is.”
Once more Djoura snorted, but she allowed Raphael to slip his arms around her. “I have grown very bad at hearing HIS voice, Djoura, except through others.
“But what does all that matter? In the end I don't need a reason to love you, except that you are Djoura and I am⦠myself. Whatever you call me.”
The Berber woman allowed her head to rest against his collarbone. She rested her hand on his shoulder. Although she was no less uncomfortable, she felt no desire to move. “Ah, PinkâRaphael. I know you are no simpleton. In some ways you are as wise as a scholar. And my singing is like a bird's peep next to yours.
“If only you weren't⦔
“Yes?” His voice was tender but worried. “Weren't what?”
“Weren't such a funny color!” Djoura burst out, and then she giggled. They both giggled together. It was a laughter that grew almost rowdy and then was cut off knife-sharp.
They stared at one another, mouths still open, silent.
Raphael pulled her closer. “You can't see my color in the dark,” he murmured close into the woman's ear.
The arms Raphael and Djoura wound around one another were hard through labor. It grew very warm on that tenebrous windy street.
“I think it is getting hotter, even up here,” stated Gaspare. Saara had one hand gripping the dragon's pierced scale while the other held the young man's hands together in front of her waist.
He leaned out over the dragon's side and the updrafts of the great beast's movement caught his red hair. Nothing but Saara's grip held him on. “This is a long mountain range, dragon,” Gaspare observed idly. “What comes after this?”
“Granada,” replied the black dragon.
The first light was miraculous but frightening, for although it enabled their feet to move with careless speed, it exposed them to the cruel, awakening world.
How white was Granada, where the sun had bleached even the urine-stained walls to fairness. And how large, for they had been shuffling through half the night and had never reached the north city wall. It was as though Djoura's stern leadership had taken them in circles.
The odor of lamp oil and that of candle wax floated out of the bare little windows along the street. Soon sandaled feet and bare feet trod the cobbles and the clay beside theirs. Raphael was once more pushed out in front. Djoura's eyes sank to the earth, doelike, submissive. She prodded her leader with one concealed knuckle.
“I don't know where I'm going, Djoura,” he said amicably. “The street keeps curving to the left.”
“It can't do that forever,” the Berber woman hissed. “Tell me what you see.”
Raphael cleared his throat. “I seeâ¦
“A shop with a brass cup hanging out in front. Another with a wheat sheaf (very dry) impaled above the door. I see a man in trousers striped with red.”
“Keep walking as you talk.”
Raphael strived to obey. “I see a crack of the sun, along that cross street. Shall we take it?”
“The sun or the cross street?” countered Djoura. They giggled togetherâagain.
“Now the sun is gone again. I see an ass pulling a cart of sandâ get over to the side, here. And I see three women with very large bottles.
“Children. More women. A black man in the doorway, with green-striped trousers.”
Djoura had to sneak a glance. “A eunuch,” she announced, flat-voiced. “Nothing to me.”
“Now the sun. Another ass. Watch the man lying in the street.”
“Drunk.” Djoura stepped carefully around.
“Two more asses. A man on a horse.” Raphael was panting with the effort it took to speak while picking their way along a street where every house was vomiting forth its inhabitants.
The street DID continue to turn left. It seemed to be a circle. What use was it to travel in a circle like this? And why would anyone build a circular street?
Raphael was about to suggest they turn at the very next cross street, and go right, toward the outside of the circle. Instead he stopped dead.
“I think you should raise your eyes, dear one,” he whispered.
Djoura lifted her eyes toward the odd-dozen black-robed men on their little desert horses who were sweeping arrogantly along the street, sending men, women, and the tiny donkeys fleeing toward doorways.
In front of them came a small fellow, mounted bareback on a horse he was having difficulty managing. Djoura recognized him at the same moment he recognized her, and she saw him pointing and heard him say, “That is her. The black infidel who worshipped the moon before my eyes!”
But Hasiim the Berber did not need such identification. He spurred his mare forward.
Raphael was watching the man come, followed by a mass of pounding hooves which could smash human flesh into the clay of the road. Had Djoura not snatched him by the hand, he might have stood there until overtaken, for he had no experience in running away from things.
Nor was running a very useful endeavor, for the horses were faster than any barefoot man, let alone a woman wrapped in heavy skirts. But Djoura slipped around a corner of the street and pulled him into a doorless entryway.
“Fly-caked pigshit!” she hissed violently. “Infidel, am I? Well, this infidel is going to spit him like a fish!”
Raphael heard horses racketing toward the narrow corner. One came through. Another trippedâslammed the sun-baked wall. A man screamed and the beast went down.
Toward them danced an hysterical Arab horse, with its light bit clenched firmly in its teeth. It tossed its head while the small citizen of Granada bounced unhappily up and down on the animal's withers. His right hand held a cavalry scimitar out in the air, where it wobbled dangerously. His left was caught in the horse's mane. He did not look at the fugitives at all.
Without hesitation Djoura struck, pulling man from mount and the sword from the hapless fellow's grasp. The freed horse bolted forward along the alley, leaving the shouts and screams of the inhabitants in its wake. The disarmed warrior crumbled into a ball before Djoura, also screaming. She lifted the scimitar above her head, then stopped still, an expression of disgust on her face. Finally she kicked the fellow out of the way.
Raphael stood next to Djoura, watching the struggling mass of fallen horses and riders which blocked the alley entrance. One animal urinated in its panic: the air grew sour.
In the sunlit street a small white mare whirled. The black robes of her rider billowed as she was spurred toward the congested corner. Then lifting into the air like a deer she leaped the whole mass and came down perfectly balanced in the alleyway only fifteen feet from Djoura.
Hasiim reined his mare expertly and her hind feet pulled under her. Dropping the reins along the mare's neck, he lifted his sword in a practiced hand.
Djoura hefted hers like a club.
The white mare sprang forward. At that same moment Raphael stepped out into the alley between Hasiim and Djoura. He raised his empty hand toward the beast. “Dami!” he cried. “Old friend, help us! Help us if you are near. If you can. Remember the horses in the pass of Aosta!”
There was nothing to see. No shadow more nor less haunted the alley. Raphael's hope shrank and he chided himself for expecting too much of a friend who had, after all, passed beyond earth's turmoils.
But the horseâHasiim's war mareâstopped dead in her tracks. Hasiim was slammed hard against her neck. She lowered her head. Nickered softly.
In the moment of the Berber's amazement, Raphael was up behind him. He took Hasiim's sword arm in both of his and struck it against the alley wall.
Hasiim cursed his mare's infidelity. He cursed enchantments. He dropped the sword.
Raphael took it in both hands and was off.
Outside the alleyway and in the wider street beyond, the desert horses stood locked in a pleasant dream. Neither spur nor quirt led to more than a fly switch of the tail. The horses who had fallen now climbed to their feet and stood together, completely blocking the entryway.
The townspeople of Granada remained where the onslaught of the fursan had driven them, watching from windows or huddled in black doorways, and what emotions this humiliation of the Berber cavalry raised in their several Muslim or Christian breasts were theirs to cherish.
Raphael passed the sword from one hand to the other, until suddenly its weight settled in his grip and he knew what to do with it.
THERE WERE FOUR OF US: MICHAEL, GABRIEL, URIEL, AND MYSELF. WE DROVE HIM OUTâHIM AND ALL HE HAD DELUDED TO STAND WITH HIM.
Raphael darted back to Djoura, and their two swords faced the light.
“What was that?” hissed the woman. “What happened to his horse?”
Raphael opened his mouth, but hardly knew what to say. “A⦠deed is redeemed: a deed done years ago, in the high mountains of the north. It is my friend who has helped usâhe of whom I told you. The pebble.”
“The pebble?” Djoura's startled eyes shifted from the danger ahead to the strange fellow beside her.
“Off your horses!” Hasiim spoke in the hill Arabic of Morocco. (Down the darkened alley Djoura heard him and cursed in the same tongue.) “Off your horses and after me!”
A more slender shape appeared among the equine silhouettes blocking the corner. One man squeezed through. Another.
With no other coign but a bolted doorway from which to fight and over a dozen swordsmen slipping toward them, the fair man and the black woman turned together and fled down the alley.
It was dank: the cobbles both slippery and odorous. Djoura ran with a focused, arrowlike urgency, like a person who knows refuge is just ahead. Raphael followed her in similar fashion, not because he believed there was such a refuge (no, he knew it was only Djoura's unquenchable confidence which led them) but because he did not want to lose her. The woman's dusty black skirts were hiked, and her scimitar bobbed in her hand. This weapon scattered once more the mothers, children, and men without employment who frequented the alley. Again shrieks and bellows.
The fugitives passed the small man's horse, the runaway, as it was being led by eager dirty hands through a doorway of clay daub toward some illicit fate. The sound of foot pursuit echoed behind them, giving wings to their own steps.
Then they were out in the morning sun again: first Djoura, whose clothes drank the brilliance and gave nothing back, but whose head flashed with coins, then Raphael, woundâno, tangledâin shawls over his striped household trousers, his fair hair flying like a horse's mane. Their eyes watered in the light and before them rose a wall: the north wall of the city of Granada.
It was impossibly high, and here and there the poor had built mud-wasp huts of clay against it, narrowing the street to a mere donkey track. Djoura turned to the left and as she bolted forward she shrieked, “The gate! We must find the gate!”
Raphael's breath rasped in his throat. He felt his nose bleeding again. He pressed behind Djoura through a blockade of dirty children, while a dog with pointed ears and a curling tail barked sharply at the confusion.
Was that a gate ahead, round arched and trimmed with tile? It was: the north gate of the city, as high as a house, and the wall around it was ornamented with lapis cut into the words of the Koran. Djoura sprang toward it and stopped, for in its shadow were framed five swordsmen, with the Qa'id Hasiim in the front.
Raphael crashed into Djoura from behind. He put one arm around her shoulder and glanced about them.
On their right the city wall, far too high to climb. On their left, a potter's shed. The street was Uttered with clay pots and with broken fragments of clay.
What had this wild flight gained them, besides burned lungs and a head full of panic? No matter. Djoura was not about to flee again. She backed against the white wall, where a buttress stood out a few feet. There she was as obvious as a fly on sugar, but there was no longer hope of hiding. Shouts from left and right told her she was surrounded by her enemy.
But then was there anyone on earth who was not Djoura's enemy? Not the people of her home, anymore, nor the Spanish giaour who stared at her now from buzzing clumps in the street. Only Pinkieâ Raphaelâwith his weak skin and strange eyes as blue as a blind man's, who stood by her now, back to back, with his scimitar fluttering in his hands lightly as a bird. She pressed against him.
Hasiim's men erupted into the sun and when they spied their quarry at bay they gave out a noise like hounds. They came with the fury and undiscipline of men who are not used to fighting on foot.
And they slid to a confused halt, for there was no flaw or opening in the defense of the blond European who stood with back against the chiseled wall. And the black woman beside him, with her weapon held up rigidly like a headsman's sword⦠All knew she was mad, and in league with spirits besides, but who knew what strange arts she possessed to do harm?
Hasiim then came forward, for he was a pure Muslim and without superstition, and he had a wealth of injured pride to avenge. He glanced from Raphael (with only professional interest) to the black Berber. He was armed once more.
Raphael shifted his balance so that he faced Hasiim and stood silently to the front of Djoura. He caught the warrior's eyes with his own and held them. Djoura, seeing that her Pinkie knew more of this business than she did, took one step back. Then Hasiim struck: a feint toward the black woman which ended as a stroke at Raphael's wrists.