Chapter Twelve
Certain persons have been begging me for the past five years to write about war against the Turks, and encourage our people and stir them up to it, and now that the Turk is actually approaching, my friends are compelling me to do this duty, especially since there are some stupid preachers among us Germans (as I am sorry to hear) who are making the people believe that we ought not and must not fight against the Turks. Some are even so crazy as to say that it is not proper for Christians to bear the temporal sword or to be rulers; also because our German people are such a wild and uncivilized folk that there are some who want the Turk to come and rule.
—Martin Luther, 'On War Against the Turks,' 1528 AD
Castle Noisvastei, Province of Baya, 10 Muharram,
1538 AH (21 October, 2113)
'You'd never been drunk before, had you?' Ling asked.
Hans, a study in misery, just shook his head and said, 'That's the second kind of virginity I gave to you. I much preferred giving you the other kind. Much.'
'I'm sure,' Ling said, grinning widely. She hadn't known she'd been his first and that was . . . warming. That he remembered and appreciated was much more so.
She asked.
She asked and was surprised as such a torrent of hate and loathing poured out of Hans as she had never heard before. Not just hate for Hamilton, whom Ling only knew of as 'De Wet,' but Hans also felt deep hatred for the Corps of Janissaries, for Moslems, for all slave dealers, and for the Caliphate. He hated the boys who'd raped Petra, the dealer who had auctioned her, and the bastard tax gatherer who had taken both the siblings away from their home. Hans hated the laws that had made him crucify a priest. He hated everything.
'Everything?'
'Okay, not everything. Not you. Not Petra. But I hate everything else about this land.'
Hamilton lay on his side, head propped up on one elbow, considering the face and form of the sleeping girl next to him.
A little contrary voice said,
Unable to stand it anymore, Hamilton reached out one hand, shook the girl awake and asked, 'How old are you?'
'Seventeen,' Petra answered groggily. 'Why?'
—
Breakfast for the two was delivered to Petra's quarters by a eunuch. It didn't have any bacon, or pork sausage, of course, but was otherwise decent.
Hamilton already had the name of the girl sitting opposite: Petra. Moreover, she was already, technically, his wife for the next thirteen days.
'I've never had a wife before,' Hamilton said.
'You don't really have one now,' Petra answered, perhaps a little sadly. Clothed in a nightgown, still her young, firm breasts showed through the front opening. Her nipples were pink, Hamilton saw. 'It's just something they do to get around the law. Doesn't mean anything.'
'How did you ever end up here?' he asked.
'You don't want to know.'
'Yes, sure I do.'
'It's a sad story,' Petra said.
'Even so.'
She sighed, cast her eyes upward and then down to the floor. 'I was a pretty little girl—'
'I can believe
'The tax gatherer picked me and my brother. First he set the jizya—'
'Jizya?' Hamilton asked.
'A tax non-Moslems pay here as part of their surrender,' she explained. 'Anyway, he set it so high my father couldn't pay . . . and when he couldn't the taxman took me instead. I was nine. My brother, Hans—he's the one who attacked you last night—they took later.'
'They sold you to this place when you were
'No . . . no. That came later. Though my friend, Ling, was sold even younger. At first I was sold to a wonderful family . . . I thought they were wonderful anyway. Their daughter, Besma, really was. We still write. She's married—
'It's okay,' Hamilton said, disconcerted at the pain growing in Petra's voice. 'You don't have to talk about it if you don't want.'
'You are my Lord and Master, for the next two weeks,' Petra said, a trifle bitterly. She sensed, somehow, that with this client she could get away with a lot more than with most. 'You asked; it is my duty to tell you.'
'Anyway,' she continued, 'life with Besma was pretty good. If you don't count her stepmother who used me to control her. And then her stepbrother and two friends decided I was just the thing for a dull afternoon—'
And then the tears came forth. The force with which they gushed took Hamilton completely by surprise.
'I never talk about it,' Petra sobbed, 'I never talk about—'
After which she couldn't say anything, as Hamilton was kneeling beside her chair, holding her in his arms, and pressing her head into his shoulder. 'Shhh,' he said soothingly. 'It's all right. You don't have to talk about it and I am a complete ass for even asking. I'm really sorry.'
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