Levi began to twist alarmingly in his ropes
Annja reached up and grabbed his right boot to stabilize him. Whether the experience unnerved him or not, he didnât continue the conversation. That suited Annja fine.
In the early afternoon the storm clouds returned with a suddenness that halfway tempted Annja to believe in Leviâs dueling mountain deities. At almost the same moment a soft cry came from above and Annja looked up to see Larryâs head silhouetted against the ominous boiling clouds. She could tell he was grinning.
Less than five minutes later Levi and Larry were helping her scramble onto the top of a gently sloping plain of ice, pierced by snow-mounded juts of rock. A mile and a half ahead of her rose the snow-covered peak of Ararat. And there, a quarter mile away to the south and west of them, the long, dark mound of the Ararat Anomaly seemed to hang over the edge of the abyss.
â¦THE ENGLISH COMMANDER TOOK JOANâS SWORD AND RAISED IT HIGH.
The broadsword, plain and unadorned, gleamed in the firelight. He put the tip against the ground and his foot at the center of the blade. The broadsword shattered, fragments falling into the mud. The crowd surged forward, peasant and soldier, and snatched the shards from the trampled mud. The commander tossed the hilt deep into the crowd.
Smoke almost obscured Joan, but she continued praying till the end, until finally the flames climbed her body and she sagged against the restraints.
Joan of Arc died that fateful day in France, but her legend and sword are rebornâ¦.
âSuch exquisite form,â Roux said. He glided to a stop easily on the ice of the outdoor skating rink. âYou make falling upon your wonderfully sculpted posterior a balletic act. Pure poetry.â He kissed his kid-gloved fingertips.
âHow about a hand, here?â Annja Creed asked. She sat like an abandoned rag doll with her mittened hands on the ice and her legs stuck out in front of her.
She regretted the request at once. The slim old man with the bright blue eyes and the carefully trimmed white beard began to clap slowly.
Seeing her expression start to resemble gathering thunderheads he desisted and extended an arm. All around them cheerful skaters passed by emitting dragon puffs of condensed breath against a black night sky from which the bright multicolored rink lights banished stars. She fought the impression they were laughing at her.
With the help of Rouxâs strength, surprising in a man his apparent age, she found herself back upright with her feet beneath her. Temporarily, anyway. She teetered, the blades of the rental skates strapped none too comfortably to her feet that slipped back and forth over the ice. Roux held her by the arm, steadying her.
âWhere is your vaunted sense of balance, which you have supposedly gained through rigorous study of your black arts?â he asked.
âMartial arts,â she said. â And the problem isnât lack of balance. Itâs lack of friction.â
âIf you say so. Now, pay attention. The principle is simplicity itself. When you go with the direction of the blades, you move without effort. If you press at an angle to the blade, you push. You see?â
Annja did. She was starting to. Sort of. She made herself draw deep breaths to the diaphragm, calming, centering herself. You can keep your head while people are shooting at you, she reminded herself sternly. So you can keep your head while doing something little children do effortlessly.
The fact was, she was determined not to let this get the better of her. She wasnât in the habit of backing away from challenges. It made her curse Roux all the more for talking her into this despite her reservations.
As she propelled herself forward a skinny septuagenarian a head shorter than Annja easily passed her by. Not a yard ahead of her a tiny girl, elfin face bracketed by enormous white puffy earmuffs, skated fearlessly backward.
Annja sighed. âI thought the Quays of the Old Port Skating Rink didnât open until December.â
The outdoor rink was in the old St. Lawrence River dockside district appended to Montrealâs downtown. Like every other run-down waterfront in every other major North American city, it had been renovated and gentrified at enormous expense sometime in the last quarter-century. Now the skaters glided and chattered to saucy French techno-pop before the broad, benign domed edifice of the Marché Bonsecours, the old market that once housed City Hall.
âCustomarily it does not open so early,â Roux said, tipping his hat to a passing pair of handsome middle-aged women. âBut the winter has come early to Montreal, as you can see. This global warming, it fails again to materialize, it seems.â