The Devil in Green (12 page)

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Authors: Mark Chadbourn

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BOOK: The Devil in Green
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'After that period, the physical and weapons training will be confined to
the early morning, after prime. Then you'll be studying herbalism for
treatment of wounds out in the field. The supply of drugs won't last long
and there's no infrastructure to manufacture any more. Astronomy is . . .
difficult.' His jaw set. 'But you'll need to navigate by the stars. And then
there's the Bible study and philosophy classes. Those are the main ones.'

He brought them into a large oak-panelled room on the first floor. On
one wall was fixed a plain wooden sign carved with the legend: '
Let nothing
have precedence over divine office' - The Rule of St Benedict.

At the other end of the room was a heavily fortified door beside a
window that opened on to a small office stacked with boxes. The knight
hammered on the windowsill to attract the attention of a man with a scar
that turned his left eye into a permanent squint. He was introduced as
Wainwright, the knights' quartermaster.

'Two uniforms?' he said, mentally measuring Mallory and Miller before
disappearing into the bowels of the store. He returned a second later.

'Perfect for a torchlight rally,' Mallory said, holding the black shirt up
for size.

'Uniforms are to be worn at all times,' the red-haired knight said. 'And
that means
all times.
Being caught without it means the disciplinary
procedure.'

Mallory considered asking what this entailed, but he knew it would only
depress him further.

 

The rest of the day was spent in a process that fell somewhere between
induction and confession: names, education, abilities, criminal record,
past transgressions, hopes, fears. Miller gave them a detailed account of
his relationship with his parents and the breakdown of his romance, the
catalyst that had propelled him towards Salisbury. Mallory changed his
story several times, often during the same strand, before delivering a
complex list of dates, times, names and anecdotes that would have taken
days of investigation before it was discovered that it made no sense at all.

'They were very nice,' Miller said afterwards, as they picked their way
amongst the huts towards the refectory, a large, newly constructed
building a stone's throw from the cathedral.

'When you say
nice,
do you mean prying, interfering, compulsive
control freaks?'

Miller looked at him, puzzled. 'No. Nice. They were nice. Didn't you
think they were nice?'

'I worry about you, Miller. You're going to be the first person ever to die
of unadulterated optimism.'

Miller sighed. 'I don't know why you came here, Mallory. We're going
to be part of something big and good. Something important. All you've
done is criticise. You're a cynic.'

'You say that as if it's a bad thing.'

'Look, there's Daniels.' Miller nodded towards the knight sauntering
ahead of them; he carried himself with confidence, seemingly above the
bustle he passed. Mallory noted how many looked at Daniels with respect,
if not awe; was it the uniform or the person? 'Come on, let's catch him up,'
Miller continued.

'So how long have you been here, Daniels?' Miller asked as he skipped
up beside him.

'Two months.' He eyed Miller's skittishness wryly. 'It was this or the
circus.'

'That must be when the call first went out. Where were you?'

Daniels looked bemused at Miller's effervescent questioning. 'Bristol.'

'I heard some of the cities were tough in the early days,' Mallory said.

A shadow crossed Daniels' face. 'It was, in some parts, for a while. The
riots had died out by the time the call filtered through - no one had the
energy left. But there were still some parts of the city you didn't go into, if
you know what I mean.' He looked across the huts at the darkening sky.

Daniels had an impressive charisma that underscored his bearing.
Mallory could imagine him in his civilian days, well groomed, wearing
expensive, fashionable clothes, maybe in some professional job; maybe a
lawyer.

'How are you finding it?' Miller had such a bright-eyed-puppy manner
that Daniels couldn't help but lighten.

'Hard, but rewarding.' He smiled. 'You'll enjoy it here.'

'Any missions yet?'

'No, but it's only a matter of time. They want to be sure before they
send anyone out there.'

'What made you come?' Mallory asked.

'You don't think I came out of obligation? An overarching desire to give
something back to Christianity? To the world?' Daniels eyed Mallory as if
he knew exactly what was going through the new arrival's head.

'Don't mind him,' Miller said. 'He's just an old cynic.'

'No,' Mallory replied. 'I don't.'

Daniels shrugged in an unconcerned way. 'My partner was killed in the
fighting. We'd been together for a while. It
left ...
a big hole.' He chose
his words carefully. 'There was nothing for me in Bristol. I thought there
might be something for me here.'

'I'm sorry,' Miller said. 'Were you planning on getting married?'

'Gareth was the religious one,' Daniels said directly to Mallory. 'He was
the one who went to church every week. I could take it or leave it. But he
died with such dignity. Faith right up to the last. That was my moment of
epiphany.'

'That's a good enough reason,' Mallory said.

With some land of unspoken agreement made amongst them, they set
off together for the refectory.

'You don't seem much of a Christian, Mallory,' Daniels noted wryly.

'I'm not much of anything.'

'Yes, he is,' Miller said brightly. 'He just doesn't know it yet.' He
proceeded to tell Daniels how Mallory had saved him.

'Self-preservation,' Mallory said. 'Two were a better defence against
those things.'

'Pants on fire,' Miller gibed.

They joined the queue filing into the refectory. The aroma of spiced hot
food floated out into the cooling twilight, setting their stomachs rumbling.
The air was filled with the hubbub of optimistic voices, the sound of
people who still couldn't believe they were getting a square meal.

'Tell me,' Mallory said to Daniels, 'when we met Blaine earlier, there
was another group of knights in training, away from the main lot. They
had a blue flash on their left shoulders.'

'The Blues? They're the elite. I think they used to be squaddies
stationed at one of the army camps out on Salisbury Plain - it would take
me years to get to their level of training. Blaine keeps them apart from the
rest of us, but that's OK by me - you can see it in their eyes.' He waved a
pointing finger in front of Mallory's face. 'Army eyes. You know what I
mean?' Mallory did. 'Anyway, they're involved in some on-going mission.
They go off for days at a time. Come back exhausted and filthy.'
'Oh?'

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