Lord Byron, Don Juan, Canto X.
Viareggio, Italy.
August 15, 1822.
It was the heat of the dog days. here under the blazing Tuscan sun, on this isolated stretch of beach along the Ligurian coast, the pebbled sands formed a griddle so intense that already now, at mid-morning, one could bake pane upon its surface. In the distance across the waters, the isles of Elba, Capraia, and little Gorgona arose like shimmering apparitions from the sea.
At the center of the crescent of beach, enfolded by its high surrounding mountains, a small group of men had a.s.sembled. Their horses could not bear the scalding sands and had been left within a nearby copse of trees.
George Gordon, Lord Byron, waited apart from the others. He"d seated himself upon a large black rock lapped by the waves ostensibly so that his famous Romantic profile, immortalized in so many paintings, would be silhouetted to best advantage against the backdrop of the glittering sea. But in fact the hidden deformity of his feet since birth had nearly prevented Byron, this morning, from leaving his carriage at all. His pale white skin, which earned him the nickname "Alba," was shaded by a broad straw hat.
From here, unhappily, he had excellent vantage to observe each detail of the dreadful scene unfolding on the beach. Captain Roberts master of Byron"s ship, the Bolivar, which lay at anchor in the bay oversaw the preparations of the men. They were building a large bonfire. Byron"s aide-de-camp, Edward John Trelawney called "the pirate" for his wild, darkly handsome looks and eccentric pa.s.sions had now set up the iron cage that served as a furnace.
The half-dozen Luccan soldiers attending them had exhumed the corpse from its temporary grave hastily dug where the body had first washed up. The cadaver scarcely resembled a human being: The face had been picked clean by fish, and the putrefied flesh was stained a dark and ghastly indigo color. Identification had been made by the familiar short jacket with the small volume of poetry in the pocket.
Now they placed the body into the furnace cage, atop the dry balsam boughs and driftwood they"d gathered from the beach. Such cadres of soldiers were a necessary presence at any such exhumation, Byron had been informed, to ensure that the proper immolation procedures were followed against the yellow fever from the Americas that was now rampaging along the coast.
Byron watched as Trelawney poured the wine and salts and oil on the cadaver. The roaring flame leapt up like a biblical pillar of G.o.d into the stark morning sky. A single seagull circled high above the flaming column, and the men tried to chase it away with cries as they flapped their shirts into the air.
The heat of the sands, inflamed by the fire, made the atmosphere around Byron seem unreal the salts had turned the flames strange, unearthly colors; even the air was tremulous and wavy. He felt truly ill. But for a reason known only to himself, he could not leave.
Byron stared into the flames, disgusted as the corpse burst open from the intensity of the heat and its brains, pressed against the red-hot bars of the iron cage, seethed and bubbled and boiled, as if in a cauldron. It could just as well be the carca.s.s of a sheep, he thought. What a nauseating and degrading sight. His beloved friend"s earthly reality was vaporized into white-hot ash before his very eyes.
So this was death.
We are all dead now, in one way or another, Byron thought bitterly. But Percy Sh.e.l.ley had drunk enough of death"s dark pa.s.sions to last a lifetime, hadn"t he?
These past six years, throughout all their peregrinations, the lives of the two famous poets were inextricably entangled. Beginning with their self-imposed exiles from England which had been undertaken in the same month and year, if not for the same reasons and throughout their residence in Switzerland. Then Venice, which Byron had quit over two years ago; and now his grand palazzo here in nearby Pisa, which Sh.e.l.ley had departed only hours before his death. They"d both been stalked by death hunted and haunted, nearly sucked down themselves into the long, cruel vortex that had begun to spin in the wake of their individual escapes from Albion.
There was the suicide of Sh.e.l.ley"s first wife, Harriet, six years ago, when Sh.e.l.ley ran off to the Continent with the sixteen-year-old Mary G.o.dwin, now his wife. Then the suicide of Mary"s half sister, f.a.n.n.y, who"d been left behind in London with their cruel stepmother when the lovers had escaped. This blow was followed by the death of Percy and Mary"s little son, William. And just last February, the death in Rome from consumption of Sh.e.l.ley"s friend and poetic idol, "Adonais" the young John Keats.
Byron himself was still reeling from the death, only months ago, of his five-year-old daughter, Allegra his "natural" child by Mary Sh.e.l.ley"s stepsister, Claire. A few weeks before Sh.e.l.ley"s death by drowning, he"d told Byron that he"d witnessed an apparition: Percy had imagined he"d seen Byron"s little dead daughter beckoning to him from the sea, beckoning him to join her beneath the waves. And now this ghastly end for poor Sh.e.l.ley himself: First the death by water; then the death by fire.
Despite the suffocating heat, Byron felt a terrible chill as he replayed in his mind the scene of his friend"s last hours.
In the late afternoon of July 8, Sh.e.l.ley had departed Byron"s grand Palazzo Lanfranchi at Pisa and had raced to his small boat, the Ariel, moored just down the coast. Against all advice or common sense, with no warning to anyone, Sh.e.l.ley had cast off at once and had sailed into the darkening belly of a coming storm. Why? thought Byron. Unless he was being pursued. But by whom? And to what end?
Yet in hindsight, this seemed the only plausible explanation as Byron had now understood for the first time, only this morning. Byron had suddenly seen, in a flash of comprehension, something he should have seen at once: Percy Sh.e.l.ley"s mysterious death by drowning was no accident. It had to do with something or was sought by someone aboard that ship. Byron now had no doubt that when the Ariel was raised from her watery grave, as she soon would be, they"d see that she had been rammed by a felucca or some other large craft, intent upon boarding her. But he also guessed that whatever had been sought had not been found.
For, as Byron had realized only this morning, Percy Sh.e.l.ley a man who"d never believed in immortality might have managed to send one last message from beyond the grave.
Byron turned toward the sea so that the others, preoccupied by the fire, would not notice when he surrept.i.tiously fished from his wallet the thin volume that he"d managed to keep hold of: Sh.e.l.ley"s copy of John Keats"s last poems, published not long before Keats"s death in Rome.
This waterlogged book had been found on the body, just as Sh.e.l.ley had left it: shoved within the pocket of his short, ill-fitting schoolboy"s jacket. It was still turned open and marked at Sh.e.l.ley"s favorite poem by Keats, "The Fall of Hyperion," about the mythological battle between the t.i.tans and those new G.o.ds, led by Zeus, who were soon to replace them. After the famous mythological battle, which every schoolboy knew, only Hyperion, the sun G.o.d and last of the t.i.tans, still survives.
This was a poem that Byron had never much cared for and that Keats himself hadn"t even liked enough to finish. But it seemed to Byron significant that Percy had taken pains to keep it on his person, even at his death. He had surely marked this one pa.s.sage for a reason: Anon rushed by the bright Hyperion; His flaming robes streamed out behind his heels, And gave a roar, as if of earthly fire...
On he flared...
At this premature end to a poem that was destined always to remain unfinished, the sun G.o.d seems to set himself aflame and whisk into oblivion in a ball of his own incandescence rather like a phoenix. Rather like poor Percy, immolated there upon the pyre.
But most critical was something that none of the others seemed to have noticed when the book was found: At just the spot where Keats had laid down his pen, Sh.e.l.ley had taken his own up, and had carefully drawn a small mark at the side of the page a kind of intaglio, with something printed inside. The ink was badly faded from the long exposure to the salt seawater, but Byron was sure he could still make it out by closer examination. That was why he had brought it here with him this morning.
Ripping the page loose from the book, Byron slipped the volume away again and carefully studied the small drawing his friend had made at the edge. Sh.e.l.ley had drawn a triangle, which enclosed three tiny circles or b.a.l.l.s, each in a different colored ink.
Byron knew these colors well, for several reasons. First, they were his own the colors of his matrilineal Scots family heraldry, which went back to before the time of the Norman Conquest. Though that was merely an accident of birth, it hadn"t helped his sojourn in Italy that Lord Byron had always displayed these colors proudly upon his enormous carriage, a vehicle patterned after that of the deposed, deceased emperor of France, Napoleon Bonaparte. For as Byron should know better than anyone, in secret or in esoteric parlance these particular colors signified far more.
The three spheres that Sh.e.l.ley had drawn in the triangle were colored black, blue, and red. The black stood for coal, which signified "Faith." Blue symbolized smoke, meaning "Hope." And red was flame, for "Charity." Together, the three colors represented the life cycle of fire. And further depicted as they were here, within a triangle, the universal symbol for "Fire" they stood for the destruction by fire of the old world as prophesied by Saint John in the Book of Revelation, and the coming of a new world order.
This very symbol these tricolored orbs within an equilateral triangle had also been chosen as the secret insignia of an underground group that intended to carry out that same revolution, at least here in Italy. They called themselves the Carbonari the Charcoal Burners.
In the aftermath of twenty-five years of French revolution, terror, and conquest that had nearly shattered all of Europe, there was only one rumor more frightful than rumors of war. And that was the rumor of internal insurrection, of a movement from within one that might demand independence from all external overlords, from all imposed rule of any kind.
During these past two years, George Gordon, Lord Byron, had shared the same roof with his married Venetian mistress, Teresa Guiccioli, a girl half his age who"d been exiled from Venice, along with her brother, her cousin, and her father but minus the cuckolded husband.
These were the notorious Gambas the "Gambitti," as they were called in the popular press highly placed members of the Carbonaria, the very group that had sworn eternal enmity to all forms of tyranny though it had failed in its attempted coup, during last year"s Carnival, to drive the Austrian rulers from Northern Italy. Instead, the Gambas themselves had been exiled from three Italian cities in succession. And Byron had followed them to each new encampment.
This was the reason why Byron"s every contact, whether in person or in writing, was now being a.s.siduously tracked by, and reported to, the official overlords of all three parts of Italy: the Austrian Habsburgs in the north, the Spanish Bourbons in the south, and the Vatican itself in the central Papal States.
Lord Byron was the secret capo of the Cacciatori Mericani "The Americans," as the popular, populist branch of the underground society was known. He"d financed from his own private funds the weapons, shot, and powder of the recent abortive Carbonari insurrection and more.
He"d supplied his friend Ali Pasha the new secret weapon to use in his rebellion against the Turks the repeating rifle which Byron had had designed for him in America.
And Byron was now funding the Hetairia ton Philikon, or Friendly Society a secret group that supported the thrust to drive the Ottoman Turks from Greece.
Lord Byron was surely everything that the imperialist dragons had most cause to fear an implacable foe of tyrants and their reigns. The powers understood that he was exactly the ferment such an insurrection wanted. And he was rich enough that, if necessary, he could also water it from his own well.
But in the past year all three of these nascent insurrections had been brutally repressed, severed at the jugular sometimes literally. Indeed, after Ali Pasha"s death seven months ago, it was told, he"d been buried at two different locations: his body at Janina, his head at Constantinople. Seven months. Why had it taken him so long to see it? Not until this morning.
It was nearly seven months since Ali Pasha"s death, and still no word, no sign...At first, Byron had a.s.sumed there"d been a change in plan. After all, much had changed in the past two years while Ali was isolated at Janina. But the pasha had always vowed that if he were ever at risk, he would find Byron by any means, via his Secret Service which was, after all, the vastest and most powerful such organization ever forged in history.
If this were to prove impossible, then in the pasha"s final hours on earth, he would destroy himself inside the great fortress of Demir Kule along with his treasure, his followers, and even the beloved and beautiful Vasiliki before letting anything fall prey to the Turks.
But now Ali Pasha was dead, and by all reports the fortress of Demir Kule had been seized intact. Despite Byron"s repeated attempts to discover any news of the fate of Vasiliki or the others who"d been taken to Constantinople, there was as yet no word. Nor had Byron received the object that was intended to be protected by himself and by the Carbonaria.
Percy"s book of poems seemed to hold the only clue. If Byron had read correctly, only half of his message was contained in the triangle he"d drawn. The other part was the poem itself: the pa.s.sage Percy had marked in Keats"s "Fall of Hyperion." Putting those two clues together, the full message would read: The old Solar G.o.d will be destroyed by a far more dangerous flame an eternal flame.
If this was correct, then Byron had grasped at once that it was he himself who had most to fear. He must act, and quickly. For if Ali Pasha was dead without the promised bombast if there was no word from survivors who"d been closest to him Vasiliki, his advisers, his Secret Service, the Bektashi sheikhs if Percy Sh.e.l.ley had been pursued from Byron"s Pisan palazzo and driven into that storm, to his death all this could mean just one thing: Everyone believed that the chess piece had reached its appointed destination, that Byron had received it everyone, that is, except whoever had escaped from Janina.
And what had become of the missing Black Queen?
Byron needed to get away and think, and to lay a plan before the others arrived aboard his ship with Percy"s ashes. It might already be too late.
Byron crumpled in his hand the page containing the message. Adopting his customary expression of detached disdain, he rose from his seat and limped painfully across the hot sands to where Trelawney still tended the fire. The dark, wild features of the "c.o.c.kney Corsair" were blackened further by soot from the blaze, and with those flashing white teeth and trailing mustachios, the man appeared more than slightly mad. Byron shuddered as he tossed the crumpled paper indifferently into the flame. He made sure that the paper had caught and burned before turning to speak to the others.
"Don"t repeat this farce with me," he said. "Let my carca.s.s rot where it falls. This Pagan Paean to a dead poet, I confess, has quite undone me I need a bit of a sea change, to cleanse my mental image of this horror."
He went back to the sh.o.r.e and with a quick nod toward Captain Roberts to confirm their prior agreement to meet afterward on the ship, Byron tossed his wide-brimmed hat aside, stripped off his shirt, and dove into the sea, cutting through the waves with strong and powerful strokes. The water was warm as blood already at mid-morning; the sun scalded "Alba"s" fair skin. He knew it would be a short mile swim to the Bolivar nothing to a man who"d already swum the h.e.l.lespont, but a long enough one that it would let him clear his mind to think. But though the rhythm of his strokes, the salt water lapping over his shoulders, helped to calm his agitation, his thoughts kept returning to one thing: No matter how he tried and wildly improbable though it might seem there was only one person Byron could think of to whom Percy Sh.e.l.ley"s message might refer, one individual who might hold the critical clue to the fate of Ali Pasha"s missing treasure. Byron himself had never met her, but her reputation preceded her.
She was Italian by birth a wealthy widow. Beside her vast riches, Lord Byron knew that his own considerable fortune would pale by comparison. She had once been world renowned, though she now was living in semi-isolation here in Rome. But in her youth, it was said that she"d bravely fought on horseback with guns for the liberation of her land from foreign powers just as Byron and the Charcoal Burners were essaying to do right now.
Despite this woman"s personal contributions to the cause of freedom, however, it was she who"d given birth to the world"s last t.i.tan-like "solar G.o.d" as Keats had described it: Her son was an imperial tyrant whose short-lived reign had terrorized all of Europe, and then swiftly burned itself out. Like Percy Sh.e.l.ley. In the end, this woman"s son had succeeded only in replanting the virulent seed of monarchy back into the world in force. He"d died barely one year ago, in anguish and obscurity.
As Byron felt the sun burning into his naked skin, he strove harder through the teeming waters to reach his ship. If he was right, he knew he had little time to lose in order to set his plan in motion.
And it was no small irony to Byron that, had this son of the Roman widow lived, today, August 15, would have been his birthday a day commemorated throughout Europe, in his behalf, those past fifteen years until his death.
The woman whom Lord Byron believed might hold the key to locating the missing Black Queen of Ali Pasha was Napoleon"s mother: Letizia Ramolino Bonaparte.
Palazzo Rinuccini, Rome September 8, 1822 Here [in Italy] there are as yet but the sparks of the volcano, but the ground is hot and the air sultry...there is a great commotion in people"s minds, which will lead to n.o.body knows what... The "king-times" are fast finishing. There will be blood shed like water, and tears like mist; but the peoples will conquer in the end. I shall not live to see it, but I foresee it.
Lord Byron It was a warm and balmy morning, but Madame Mre had arranged to have all the fires flickering in the hearths throughout the palazzo, candles lit in each room. The costly Aubusson carpets had all been brushed, the Canova sculptures of her famous children had all been dusted. Madame"s servants were attired in their finest green-and-gold livery and her brother, Cardinal Joseph Fesch, would soon arrive from his nearby Palazzo Falconieri to help greet the guests to whom she always opened her home on this one day each year. For today was an important day in the holy calendar, a day that Madame Mre had vowed she would never ignore and always honor: the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin.
She"d been performing this ritual for more than fifty years ever since she had taken her vow to the Virgin. After all, hadn"t her favorite son been born on the Feast Day of the a.s.sumption of the Blessed Virgin into heaven? That weak little baby whose birth had come so suddenly and unexpectedly early, when she young Letizia, only age eighteen had already lost two previous infants. So she"d made a vow on that day to Our Lady that she would always honor Her birth without fail, and that she would consecrate her children to the Blessed Virgin.
Though the child"s father had insisted upon naming the new infant Neapolus after an obscure Egyptian martyr instead of Carlo-Maria, as Letizia herself would have preferred, Letizia had made sure to christen all her daughters with the prenom of Maria: Maria Anna, who would later be known as Elisa, the Grand d.u.c.h.ess of Tuscany; Maria Paula, called Pauline, the Princess Borghese; and Maria Annunziata, later called Caroline, Queen of Naples. And they called her Madame Mre Our Lady Mother.
The Queen of Heaven had indeed blessed all the girls with health and beauty, while their brother, later known as Napoleon, had given them wealth and power. But none of it was to last. These gifts had all dissipated, just like those roiling mists she still could recall surrounding her native isle of Corsica.
Now, as Madame Mre moved through the flower-filled, candlelit rooms of her vast Roman palazzo, she knew that this world would not last either. Madame Mre knew, with a palpitating heart, that this tribute to the Virgin today might prove to be her last in a very long time. Here she was, an old woman left nearly alone, her family all dead or scattered, dressed in perpetual mourning attire and living in an environment so alien to her, surrounded only by transitory things: wealth, possessions, memories.
But one of those memories may have suddenly come back to haunt her.
For only this morning Letizia had received a message, a hand-delivered note from someone whom she had neither seen nor heard from in all these many years, throughout the rise and fall of the Bonaparte Empire not since Letizia and her family had departed the wild mountains of Corsica nearly thirty years ago. It was from someone whom Letizia had come to believe, by now, must be dead.
Letizia slipped the note from the bodice of her black mourning dress and read it again perhaps for the twentieth time since she"d received it this morning. It was not signed, but there could be no mistaking who had written it. It was written in the ancient Tifinagh script, the Tamasheq tongue of the Tuareg Berbers of the deep Sahara. This language had always been a secret code used by only one person in communiques with her mother"s family.
It was for this reason that Madame Mre had sent urgently for her brother the cardinal to arrive here at once before the other guests. And to bring the Englishwoman along with him that other Maria who"d just recently returned to Rome. Only these two might be able to help Letizia in her dreadful plight.
For if this man whom they called the Falcon had indeed arisen as if from the dead, Letizia knew precisely what she herself would be called upon to do.
Despite the warmth of the many fires in her chambers, Letizia felt that all too familiar chill from the depths of her own past as she read the fateful lines once more: The Firebird has arisen. The Eight return.
Ta.s.sili n"Agger, The Sahara Autumn Equinox, 1822 We are immortal, and do not forget, We are eternal, and to us the past Is, as the future, present.
Lord Byron, Manfred Charlot stood on the high mesa, surveying the vast red desert. His white burnoose flapped about him in the breeze like the wings of a large bird. His long hair floated free, the color of the coppery sands that stretched before him. Nowhere on earth could one find a desert of this precise hue: the color of blood. The color of life.
This inhospitable spot, high on a cliff in the deepest Sahara, a place where only wild goats and eagles chose to live. It had not always been so. Behind him on the fabled cliffs of the Ta.s.sili were five thousand years of carvings and paintings burnt sienna, ocher, raw umber, white paintings that told the story of this desert and those who had peopled it in the mists of time, a story that was still unfolding.
This was his birthplace what the Arabs called one"s watar, or homeland though he had not been here since he was a babe in arms. Here was where his life had begun, Charlot thought. He was born into the Game. And here, perhaps, was where the Game was destined to end once he had solved the mystery. That"s why he had returned to this ancient wilderness, this tapestry of brilliant light and of dark secrets: to find the truth.
The desert Berbers believed he was destined to be the one to solve it. His birth had been foretold. The oldest Berber legend spoke of a child born before his time, with blue eyes and red hair, who would possess the Second Sight. Charlot closed his eyes and inhaled the scent of this place, sand and salt and cinnabar, evoking his own most primal physical memories.
He"d been thrust into the world early red and raw and screaming. His mother, Mireille, an orphan of sixteen, had fled her convent in the Basque Pyrenees and journeyed here across two continents, into the deep desert, to protect a dangerous secret. She had been what they called a thayyib, a woman who had known a man only once: his father. Charlot"s birth, here on the cliffs of the Ta.s.sili, was midwifed by an indigo-veiled Berber prince with blue-tinted skin, one of the "blue men" of the Kel Rela Tuareg. This was Shahin, the desert falcon, who was to serve as parent, G.o.dparent, and tutor for this chosen child.
Across the vast desert before him now, as far as Charlot could see, the silent red sands shifted as they had for untold centuries, moving restlessly, like a living, breathing thing sands that seemed a part of him, sands that erased all memory...
All but his own, that is. Charlot"s terrible gift of remembering was always with him even the memory of those things that had not yet come to pa.s.s. When he was a child, they had called him the Little Prophet. He"d foreseen the rise and fall of empires, the futures of great men, like Napoleon and Alexander of Russia or like that of his true father, whom he"d only met once: Prince Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand.
Charlot"s memory of the future had always been like an unstoppable wellspring. He could foresee it, though he might not be able to change it. But of course the greatest gift could also be a curse.
To him, the world was like a chess game, where each move that one made generated a myriad of potential moves and at the same time revealed an underlying strategy, as implacable as destiny, that drove one relentlessly onward. Like the game of chess, like the paintings on the rock, like the eternal sands for him, the past and the future were always present.
For Charlot had been born, as it was foretold, beneath the gaze of the ancient G.o.ddess, the White Queen, whose image was painted in the hollow of the great stone wall. She"d been known across all cultures and throughout all times. She hovered above him now like an avenging angel, carved high on the sheer stone cliff. The Tuareg called her Q"ar "the Charioteer."
It was she, they said, who had spangled the nighttime sky with glittering stars. And she who had first set the Game upon its adamantine course. Charlot had journeyed here from across the sea to lay his eyes upon her for the first time since his birth. It was she alone, they said, who might reveal perhaps only to the chosen one the secret behind the Game.
Charlot awakened before dawn and tossed off the woolen djellaba he"d used as a cover against the open night air. Something was terribly wrong, though he couldn"t yet sense what it was.
Here in this spot a difficult four-day hike over treacherous terrain from the valley below he knew he was well protected. But there was no hiding from the fact that something was amiss.
He rose from his makeshift bed for a better view. Away to the east, toward Mecca, he could make out the thin ribbon of red that ran across the horizon, portending the sun. But he did not yet have enough light to make out his surroundings. As he stood there in the silence atop the mesa, Charlot heard a sound only meters away. First, a soft footstep on gravel, then the sound of human breathing.
He was terrified to make a false step, or even to move.
"Al-Kalim it is I," someone whispered though there was no one within miles to hear.
Only one man would address him as Al-Kalim: the Seer. "Shahin!" cried Charlot. He felt the strong, firm hands press his wrists the hands of the man who"d always been mother and father, brother and guide.
"But how have you found me?" said Charlot. And why had Shahin risked his life to cross the seas and the desert? To come through this treacherous canyon by night? To arrive here before dawn? Whatever had brought him to this place must be urgent beyond imagining.
But more important: Why hadn"t Charlot foreseen it?
The sun broke over the horizon, licking the rolling dunes in the distance with a warm pink glow. Shahin"s hands still firmly grasped Charlot"s in his own, as if he could not bear to let him go. After a long moment, he released Charlot and drew back his indigo veils.
In the rosy light, Charlot could see the craggy, hawklike features of Shahin for the first time. But what he saw in that face actually frightened him. In the twenty-nine years of his life, Charlot had never seen his mentor betray any emotion at all, under any circ.u.mstance, much less the emotion that Charlot could see written on Shahin"s face right now, which terrified him: pain.
Why could Charlot still not see inside?
But Shahin was struggling to speak: "My son..." he began, nearly choking on the words.
Although Charlot had always thought of Shahin as his parent, this was the first time that the elder man had ever addressed him in this fashion.
"Al-Kalim," Shahin continued, "I would never ask you to use that great gift that was bestowed upon you by Allah, your gift of the Vision, if this were not a matter of the gravest importance. A crisis has occurred that has driven me to cross the sea from France. Something of great value may have fallen into evil hands, something I learned of only months ago..."
Charlot, with fear gripping his heart, understood that if Shahin had come for him here in the desert with such urgency, the crisis must be grave indeed. But Shahin"s next words were more shocking still.
"It has to do with my son," he added.
"Your...son?" repeated Charlot, fearing that he"d not heard correctly.
"Yes, I have a son. He is greatly beloved," Shahin told him. "And like you, he was chosen for a life that is not always ours to question. From his earliest years, he has been initiated into a secret order. His training was nearly complete ahead of its time, for he is only fourteen years old. Six months ago, we received word that a crisis had occurred: My son had been sent upon an important mission by the highest shaikh the Pir of his order in an attempt to help avert this crisis. But it seems that the boy has never arrived at his destination."
"What was his mission? And what was his intended destination?" Charlot asked though he realized, in a state of panic, that this was the first time he"d ever had to ask such a question. Why didn"t he already know the answer?
"My son and a companion in this mission were bound for Venice," Shahin answered, though he was looking at Charlot strangely, as if the same question had just struck him, too: How could Charlot not know?
"We have reason to fear that my son, Kauri, and his companion were abducted." Shahin paused, then added, "I have learned that they had in their possession an important piece of the Montglane Service."