beings.
A simple idea for a poor lad from Cork, born in the year 1896, to understand; almost impossible for these French-born lords and barons to comprehend, though — most of whom didn’t even bother to speak the same language as the peasants they ruled over.
Liam realized, once again, how there was a bewildering one-sidedness to things. He and Bob had arrived back in 1194 at the beginning of January, a cold desolate month of dark grey days. Now it was June. Winter had ended, spring had been and gone, and summer appeared to have arrived early, the trees already thick and green with budding leaves. But for Maddy and Sal, he imagined only half an hour or an hour would have passed; the time it took to recharge the displacement machine.
He shook his head.
‘What is the matter, Liam?’
‘I just realized something.’
‘What?’
‘I’m ageing faster than the other two.’
‘Maddy and Sal?’
‘Aye.’
‘That is correct. For you much more time has passed.’
He tutted. ‘But that’s not fair, is it? We keep doing long missions like this … I could end up an old codger while they’re still bleedin’ teenagers.’
Bob looked at him, uncertain how to respond. ‘It is an unavoidable consequence of time travel, Liam.’
He sighed. ‘Ahh well, I suppose I agreed to this kind of thing when I let that old man Foster take me.’
They walked in silence for a while, the walls echoing with the clank and rasp of Eddie’s recruits drilling.
‘We have another tax collection organized for today, don’t we?’
‘Affirmative.’
Half a dozen of the nearest nobles’ estates had been paid a visit by Bob, Liam and half the castle’s garrison. Each time they’d returned with wagons loaded with grain and a tithe of coins. The nobles and barons all pleaded poverty when they turned up outside their walled keeps, all claiming that John’s taxes had left them destitute and starving, but it was surprising how well fed they and their household servants all seemed to be, and how well stocked their granaries were. Meanwhile their tenant farmers beyond the walls looked as much like scarecrows as the people of Nottingham had last winter.
‘We’ll do the visits first, then you can return with the loot, but I need to go on to Kirklees.’
Bob stopped. ‘You should not travel without an escort, Liam. There are still bandits in the forest.’
‘I know … I know. I’ll take some men with me, I promise. On horseback we should make it before nightfall; we can stay at the priory and return early tomorrow. I just think it’s time to update the others, and make sure Becks is ready to come back. Her mission clock is ticking down too.’
‘Affirmative.’
Eddie called out and his men ceased drilling. Liam watched the recruits at rest; a pair of young women moved among them with water butts strung from poles across their shoulders. They served the hot and thirsty men ladles of water that they drank and splashed across their sweaty faces.
‘I wonder,’ said Liam, ‘I wonder how she’s doing?’
CHAPTER 45
1194, Oxford Castle, Oxford
‘Have I told you, Lady Rebecca … have I told you how
Becks nodded and smiled down at him faintly. ‘One hundred and twenty-seven times, Sire,’ she replied matter-of-factly as she gently stroked his cheek.
He laughed. ‘You are so … so
She nodded slowly, carefully weighing up what was the most appropriate thing to say back to him.
Response Candidates:
1. I thank you for your kind words, Sire. (78 % relevance)
2. I wish to be different for you, my love. (21 % relevance)
3. I am different, Sire. I am a combat unit from the year 2056. (1 % relevance)
She giggled shyly, a gesture she’d observed other women use all the time in response to flirtatious flattery. ‘I thank you for your kind words, Sire.’
He frowned. Mock serious. ‘Sire?
She nodded. ‘Then I shall call you John.’
He smiled dreamily and collapsed back, his head cradled in her lap once more. ‘I have never felt so content,’ he murmured, his eyes closing as she stroked his troubled brow. ‘Never in my miserable life, not even with so many things to vex me — troublesome barons, no money, unrest, troubles, troubles, troubles …’ He continued, she pretending to listen, nodding at what she calculated were the right moments, but the cognitive part of her mind was busy elsewhere.
[Mission time remaining: 588 hours 56 minutes]
Time was running out. Another three weeks and she would have to return to 2001. If
At first, she’d been uncertain how effective and convincing her responses were going to be to his overtures, his poems, his breast-beating declarations of utter infatuation. But then one of the household maids had spotted her awkwardness and taken her to one side. An older woman, with a lifetime of experience to offer her, she listened intently. The maid gave Becks advice on how best to respond to all the things John was likely to say, how best to please him.
She’d wondered how exactly to translate the nugget of advice into a practical behavioural response strategy. Cross-referencing it with modern language idioms, she concluded the old lady meant:
Which was the tactical solution she’d decided to adopt. And it appeared to have worked. John, to use another modern expression, ‘was like putty in her hands’. Like a fawning puppy. She understood that gave her some degree of leverage; that she could ask favours of John that no one else would dare to ask. But a part of her AI understood human behaviour enough to know that to ask him too much about the thing she wished to know more about was to invite his suspicion.
This thing, of course, was the
In the last five months, she had chosen to raise the subject less than half a dozen times. On each occasion she’d only asked after ensuring John had consumed enough wine to render him insensibly drunk.
His rambling replies had yielded
The Confession was something that his older brother, Richard, had come across as a much younger man, back when the sons of Henry II were all still boys and living at Beaumont Palace. It was apparent that John was not lying when he said he had no idea how the document found its way into the royal library, but that somehow his