her robes over her shoulders, then raised her to her feet and stood holding her.
'Since the first moment I saw you, my heart was slain by your beauty,' the prince said. 'I swear before the throne of Allah, I wanted only to keep you with me. I knew that once you tasted of life in the palace, you would be content to stay. I would have married you,' he raised his eyes hopefully, 'I would marry you still -'
'You are already married,' Cait pointed out tartly.
'It is no impediment to a Moor of my rank and wealth,' replied the prince, recovering something of his former composure. 'We are permitted more than one wife, and I would make you very happy.'
Cait turned her face away.
'I have disgraced myself in your eyes,' the prince said.
'Yes,' agreed Cait sharply. 'We agree on that at least.'
'Tell me how I can redeem myself, and it shall be done.'
'Then tell me what has become of my knights,' she demanded. 'They did not ride out this morning. Where are they?'
Hasan hesitated. The anguish on his face appeared genuine.
'Tell her, my lord,' Danji said.
The prince looked to Halhuli for help, his eyes pleading. 'I will tell her, if you wish,' the advisor said. Hasan nodded, and lowered his head in shame.
'Your knights are resting comfortably, my lady,' said Halhuli, stepping forward. 'They have been confined to the Ladies' Tower. They have not been harmed.'
'You must release them at once,' Cait insisted.
Prince Hasan hesitated.
'My lord prince, you profess to feelings of affection for me. If that is true, you must release my knights. I will speak to them,' Cait said. 'Lord Rognvald is an honourable man, and he will understand. There will be no blood shed over this-only you must set them free at once.'
The prince raised his unhappy gaze to Cait. 'Very well.' To Halhuli he said, 'See that it is done.'
More relieved than angry, Cait did not have it in her to sustain her fury any longer. 'All will yet be well, my lord prince,' she told him. Taking Danji by the arm, she said, 'Come, we will see to those bruises while we wait.'
Leaving Prince Hasan to stew in his misery, the two women proceeded to the reception hall to wait for the Norsemen's release. While they waited, Danji's maidservants applied a soothing balm to the red stripes on her shoulders and back.
'You have suffered this injury for my sake,' said Cait as the servants finished applying the unguent. 'I am sorry, Danji. If we had left the palace when you warned me…'
'It is finished. We need not speak of it again.' She waved the servants away and arranged her clothing once more. 'Please, I would not have you think ill of my husband.'
'I do think ill of him,' Cait replied. 'A man is a brute who would do a thing like this to -'
Danji shook her head. 'You do not understand.' She sighed and gazed at her hands which were clasped in her lap. 'My husband is an honourable man. He is good and kind, but great as is the love within him, greater still is his grief.'
Cait regarded the dark-eyed woman before her. 'Are you telling me sorrow has driven him to behave this way?'
Danji nodded. 'Two years ago this palace was a very different place. We were happy then. The voices of children rang in the courtyards and corridors, and the women's quarters were full of gossip and activity. Truly, Al- Jelal was a small portion of paradise on earth.' Her gaze fell to her hands once more. 'Now it is a tomb.'
'What happened?'
'The fever.' Danji shook her head. 'It was very bad. The children were taken first. I lost my baby, and Hasan's sister lost two of hers -and then Hasmidi herself was taken, and Hasan's mother also. Four of the serving maids died in one night. After that, the fever spread to the rest of the palace.'
Cait was beginning to understand the enormity of the tragedy. 'What did you do?'
'There was nothing to be done, but wait, and watch our people die, and bury their bodies when the fever was finished with them. The plague passed to the servants' quarters, and most of them were taken, and the stablehands and grooms-the fever even killed some of the horses. And still it had not reached its full height.
'Tughril, the old prince, Hasan's father, was taken, and his last remaining wife. Then Hasan's younger brother, Kalaat, and his wife-they had been married less than a year.'
'Oh, Danji, I am sorry. I had no idea.'
'In the end, Hasan lost all of his family, except me. He lost his sons and heirs.' Danji raised sad eyes to Cait. 'Please, the prince is not a bad man. He is desperate to make this empty shell of a palace a home once more. He has been praying every day for a way to make this happen. And then he found you.'
Cait understood at last. 'When he saw me in the wood, he must have thought…' She shook her head in wonder. 'I had no idea.'
'Truly, I do not believe he meant to harm anyone.'
'I thank you for telling me. It is indeed a sorrowful tale, but I feel better for knowing. I will not judge your husband too harshly.'
They sat together in silence for a time and then, hearing footsteps in the anteroom, turned as Lord Rognvald and two of the knights came trooping into the hall. Lord Rognvald hurried to where Cait and Danji stood waiting. 'Thank God you have not been harmed,' he said, taking her by the arms. 'I was worried. I did not know what he might do.'
'Is there anything to eat?' wondered Svein, eyeing the empty tables.
'Or drink? It is thirsty work being a hostage,' said Yngvar.
'Be seated, all of you,' said Danji, rising. 'I will order food and drink to be brought.'
'It would be a kindness,' Cait told her. 'Perhaps I should go with you.'
'There is no need,' replied the young woman. 'My husband's shame is sufficient; he will not increase it with another attack.'
Danji walked with slightly pained dignity from the room, and the knights took places at the empty table to wait for the food to appear.
'I did not know she could speak Latin,' said Rognvald when she had gone.
'Nothing here is quite as it seems,' Cait replied. 'Lady Danji is not Hasan's sister; she is his wife. And, if he had won his way, I would have been his wife as well.'
This brought a smile from Rognvald.
'What?' demanded Cait accusingly. 'And is that so unlikely that you should mock?'
'It is not mockery you see, but pleasure. I confess, I much prefer the Lady Caitriona before me to the swooning, cow-eyed maid we have been seeing of late.'
'Cow-eyed indeed,' replied Cait with an indignant huff. 'Perhaps I should have left you locked in the tower.'
'That would have been a shame,' replied Rognvald lightly, 'for then we would never learn where Alethea has been taken.'
'Hasan? You mean he knows where she is?'
'That I do believe.' The tall knight nodded firmly. 'In any event, I sent Dag, Rodrigo, and Paulo to fetch the prince, so we will soon discover the truth of this treacherous affair.'
PART III
September 7, 1916: Edinburgh, Scotland
I read through most of the night, and all the next day. My reckoning may be faulty, for it is difficult to gauge the passage of time below ground. Without the sun to aid orientation, one loses all sense of regularity and proportion; the body quickly succumbs to its own peculiar rhythm. Hence, I ate and slept as it seemed right to me, performing any small tasks as need or whim dictated-washing, grooming, tending the fire-and the rest of the time,