The Traitor's Blade Kevin Sands (large screen ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Kevin Sands
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âDo you know what it means?â
âI was hoping you would.â
He shook his head. âBenedict always kept pigeons, as you well know.â He nodded toward Bridget. âBeyond that? Nothing comes to mind.â
I told him weâd thought that RĂ©mi was the Raven and described him. âSimon said heâs dead. But in the letter, the Raven claims Master Benedict was his enemy. Can you think of who that might be?â
Isaac mulled it over. âHard to say. I donât recognize RĂ©miâs description, but the man might have met Benedict years ago, so he wouldnât look like he did last November. Whatâs more, he could have met him during his travels, maybe in France. I doubt Iâve ever seen him.â He regarded me. âYouâre not certain this RĂ©mi was the Raven, then?â
âI just want to make sure.â
âUnderstandable. Unfortunately, your description narrows down nothing. Your master made countless enemies over the years, some quite serious.â
âHe did?â
Isaac smiled. âYou loved Benedict, so youâre forgetting how abrasive he could be with those he thought ridiculous. He had many, many arguments with other apothecaries, physicians, even Parliament, about all sorts of things. The proper preparation of remedies, the care of patients, the management of outbreaks⊠Half of his opponents he thought quacks; the others, fools, and he was never shy about stating it. Being well respectedâif not always well likedâmeant he ruined many a reputation over the years. In London and abroad.â
âSo weâll never really know,â I said, disappointed.
âNot necessarily. Benedict kept detailed journals, all the way back to his own days as an apprentice. Heâll certainly have noted his nastier opponentsâand itâs the pure viciousness in this letter that worries me. Perhaps we might find something there.â
Iâd read some of Master Benedictâs journals before. One had even been a great help during the plague. âI have a few at home.â
Isaac nodded. âBenedict stored the rest downstairs, so Iâll have any years youâre missing. If you bring what you have to me, Iâll go through them in detail. See if anything sparks my memory.â
âWe should work out this new message first,â Sally said.
Everyone agreed that was more pressing. Isaac studied the second letter, reading the line before the puzzle. âââLa ruota dellâitaliano,âââ he said. âYou understand what itâs asking?â
âI have the device here,â I said, holding up the sack Iâd brought from Blackthorn. âI can solve the code. Itâs the riddles I donât really understand. Not even the first one.â
I spread the letters out, and we looked at the first rhyming couplet.
An oath was made, a promise sworn,
To those who wished to bind him.
But he returned, and offered scorn,
And so they come to find him.
âLord Walsingham thought that was a threat against the king,â I said.
âI would tend to agree,â Isaac said, âand not just because of the murders at Whitehall. Charles is well known for breaking oaths.â
âHe is?â Tom said, disappointed.
âIndeed. Heâs a generous ruler, as youâve all discovered, but a slippery one, when he wishes to be. Many a time heâs made a promise, then broken it when it was not to his advantage. Which does, unfortunately, make it difficult to decide who this current enemy is. Have you found any more clues?â
âWellâŠâ I looked at the others. âWhen Simon was attacked, he thought he heard the assassin say something.â
âWhat was it?â
âââFor the convent.âââ
Isaac looked at me over his spectacles, amused. âNo doubt Simon misheard. But that would mean the true curse was something close. Convent⊠con⊠ventâŠâ
âCovent, maybe?â Sally said.
âLike Covent Garden?â I said. âThatâs just north of the palace.â
âThe market?â Tom said. âOur enemies arenât nunsâtheyâre fruits?â
Isaac smiled. âAlso unlikely. But this may be the right track. Convent⊠Covent⊠oh.â
He sat up, eyes alight.
âYes,â he said. âI know what this riddle means.â
CHAPTER
24
âWHAT IS IT?â I SAID.
Isaac sipped his coffee. âWhat do you know of the Civil Wars? Before His Majesty was sent into exile, I mean.â
âJust what I learned in Cripplegate.â For Master Benedict, the Civil Wars fell under the realm of politics, so heâd ignored them in my education. âOliver Cromwell led the troops of Parliament to overthrow the previous king, Charles I. Our current king, Charles II, went to Scotland after his father was executed. Cromwell then came for him, Parliamentâs troops won, and His Majesty had to flee into exile for good.â
âA fair summary,â Isaac said, âif lacking in certain details. The key points you miss concern our current king.
âCharles was in France when his father was executed. England, then, under the control of Oliver Cromwell and the Commonwealth, abolished the monarchy. But our king is king of England and Scotland, and the Scots were not willing to give up the throne. In fact, they were quite angry that Cromwell had executed Charles I, as he was their king, too, and theyâd been assured of his safety.
âSo the Scots suggested that Charles II rule from the north. However, they refused to let him into the country unless he signed an oath.
âThe wars, you see, had become religious. The English were ruled by Puritans under Cromwell, while the Scots were Presbyterian. And the Puritans did much to try and stamp out every faith but their own.
âScotland wanted not only to defend its own religion, but to spread it to England. So the Scots forced Charles II to sign a treaty accepting a document that promised to spread Presbyterianism, and stamp out other religions. The document was named the Solemn League and Covenant.â
I sat up. âCovenant. Thatâs what Simon heard. Not âfor the convent.â For the Covenant.â
âBut this treaty was signed, what, fifteen years ago?â Sally said. âWhy are they coming for His Majesty now?â
âThatâs where the rest of the history matters,â Isaac said. âThe treaty was a humiliation for Charles. He hated the Covenant, yet not only was he forced to sign it, he was then made to sit through constant lectures about the evils of his ways, and of his
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