A Burnable Book. Bruce Holsinger
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Название: A Burnable Book

Автор: Bruce Holsinger

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780007493319

isbn:

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      Jane Lawler, his wife

      Denise Haveryng, widow of Cornhull

      Nathan Grimes, master butcher of Cutter Lane, Southwark

      Tom Nayler, his first apprentice

      Gerald Rykener, his second apprentice and ward; brother of Eleanor/Edgar

      Millicent Fonteyn, singlewoman of Cornhull; sister of Agnes Fonteyn

      Sam Varney, gravedigger

      IN OXFORD

      Peter de Quincey, keeper of the books of Durham

      John Clanvowe, knight of the King’s Chamber

      John Purvey, curate of Lutterworth, disciple of John Wycliffe

      IN FLORENCE

      John Hawkwood, mercenary knight, chief of the White Company

      Adam Scarlett, his chief lieutenant

      Jacopo da Pietrasanta, his chancellor

      Giovanni Desilio, doctor of the Studium Generale, Siena

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       ImageMissing Prologue

       Moorfields, north of the walls

      Under a clouded moon Agnes huddles in a sliver of utter darkness and watches him, this dark-cloaked man, as he questions the girl by the dying fire. At first he is kind seeming, almost gentle with her. They speak something like French: not the flavour of Stratford-at-Bowe nor of Paris, but a deep and throated tongue, tinged with the south. Olives and figs in his voice, the embrace of a warmer sea.

      He repeats his last question.

      The girl is silent.

      He hits her.

      She falls to the ground. He squats, fingers coiled through her lush hair.

      ‘Doovay leebro?’ he gently chants. Ileebro, mee ragazza. Ileebro.’ It could be a love song.

      The girl shakes her head. This time he brings a fist, loosing a spray of blood and spittle from her lips. A sizzle on a smouldering log. Now he pulls her up, dangling her head before him, her body a broken doll in his hands. Another blow, and the girl’s nose cracks.

      ‘Ileebro.’ Screaming at her now, shaking her small frame.

      ‘Nonloso!’ she cries. ‘Nonloso, seenoray.’ She spits in his face.

      He releases her and stands. Hands on his knees, he lets fly a string of words. Agnes can make nothing of them, but the girl shakes her head violently, her hands clasped in prayer.

      ‘No no no, seenoray, no no no.’ She screams, sobs, now whimpers as her softening cries fade into the silence of the moor.

      When she is still he speaks again. ‘Doovay leebro?’

      This time the girl hesitates. Moonlight catches the whites of her eyes, her gaze darting toward the dense foliage.

      In the thick brush Agnes stiffens, ready to spring. The moment lengthens. Finally, in the clearing, the girl lowers her head. ‘Nonloso.’ Her voice rings confident this time, unafraid.

      The man raises a hand. In it he clutches a stick of some kind. No, a hammer. ‘This is your last chance, my dear.’

      Agnes’s limbs go cold. Perfect gentleman’s English. More than that, she knows this man’s voice, has heard it close to her ear, though she can’t summon the face. One of a thousand.

      Now the girl throws back her head, lips parted to the dark sky, the dread ascending in a last flux of words: ‘Though faun escape the falcon’s claws and crochet cut its snare, when father, son, and ghost we sing, of city’s blade beware!

      English again, brushed with an accent, confusing the night with these strange portents hurled at the stars. She’s taunting him, Agnes thinks. He hesitates, the hammer still in the air.

      Finally it descends. There is a glint of iron, and a sound Agnes will never forget.

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      For hours Agnes waits, as the moon leaves the sky, as the din of night creatures falls slowly into a bottomless silence. Now dawn, birdsong mingling with the distant shouts of workingmen within the city walls. The priory rings Lauds, and light rises across the moor.

      Time to move. She arms aside a span of branches, scoring her wrists on dense clusters of twigs and nubs. A tentative foot out among the primrose, a pale blanket of scent.

      Her gaze glides over the clearing: the lean-to, the remnants of the fire, the body. Her killer has stripped the girl to the flesh. Not with unthinkable intent, but with a deliberation that makes clear his aim. He was searching her, picking at her, like a wolf at a fresh kill. No rings on the delicate fingers, no brooch at the slender neck, though a silver bracelet circles her wrist. With her right hand Agnes clumsily unclasps it, admiring the small pearl pendant, the delicate chain. She pockets it. The only other item of value is a damask dress, tossed over a rotten log. Too big and bulky to carry into the city, and too fine for Agnes to wear.

      Her left arm, still pinned at her side, aches. The small bundle has been clutched too tightly to her breast, almost moulded to her body. A thousand thorns wake her limb as she examines what the doomed girl thrust wordlessly at her hours ago. A bright piece of cloth, tied in leather cord, wrapped around a rectangular object of some kind. She collapses on a high stone and rests the bundle on her knees. With one tug the cord comes free.

      A book. She opens it, looking for pictures. None. She tosses the thin manuscript to the ground.

      What she notices next is the cloth. A square of silk, the embroidery dense and loud, the whole of it still stiff with the volume’s shape. She spreads the cloth to its full span. Here is a language she reads: of splits and underside couching, of pulled thread and chain stitch, an occulted story told in thread of azure, gold, and green. At the centre of the cloth appear symbols that speak of ranks far above hers. Here a boy, there a castle, there a king; here lions rampant, there lilies of France; here a sword, there a shield.

      Agnes knows something of livery, suspects the import of what she holds. A woman has just died for it, a man has just killed. For what? She СКАЧАТЬ