VOLUME VI: To Lie With Lions
Synopsis by Judith Wilt
Nicholas de Fleury goes from success to success, expertly operating
large structures by the nice application of invisible pressure,
as the craftsmen do in the miracle plays in which he has from
time to time taken part.Within the theatre of family he has produced
the convincing illusion of harmony between himself and Gelis,
his estranged wife, for the sake of their beloved, acknowledgeable
son Jodi. Within the circus of statecraft, where the lions of
Burgundy and France, Venice and Cyprus, England and Scotland,
Islam and Christendom stalk and snarl, the Banco de Niccolò wields
a valued whip. Its padrone is a cosmopolitan, virtually stateless
man, intellectually drawn to the puzzle of history in the making,
but not visibly compelled by the roots of race--although, to be
sure, some of his enemies think him motivated mainly by the passion
of revenge on his own family.
Free now to enlarge and complete projects in the small, unsteady
country of Scotland--which the priest Godscalc, half guessing
his intent, had compelled him to abandon for two years--Nicholas
carries out two coups de théatre which have consequences and resonances unexpected by their designer.
He spends ruinously of his time and the kingdom's money on a nativity
play whose single performance, a glory of thought, feeling, and
art which makes transcendence of all its illusions and momentarily
unites its fractured community, hints at the strength and value
of the wounded spirit who has devised it. And he mounts a merchant
expedition to the fish-fertile waters of Iceland, whence he lures
and bests his old rivals the Adornes and the Vatachino company,
as well as a new one, the Danziger pirate Pauel Benecke.
Sharing this adventure are Kathi Sersanders and Robin of Berecrofts,
a Scottish youth whose courage, and desire to break free of the
bounds of his sturdy mercantile heritage, bring him to the magnetic
Nicholas as an admiring squire. Together they explore the new
world of the north, learn from the hardy generosities of the Icelanders,
and, transformed in the end from actors and designers to spectators,
experience in awe and humility Nature's own nativity play, the
re-creation of a continent in the double explosions of Katla and
Hekla, the volcanoes of Iceland.
Nicholas' well-wishers will need this glimpse of his humanity.
For in the matters he controls, Nicholas' plans are coming to
dark fruition. Gelis has a climactic announcement to make--she
has won the war between them because she has secretly been working
for years for the Vatachino. But Jorden de St Pol, whose painfully
rebuilt career in France Nicholas has undermined once again, brings
a devastating illumination: Nicholas knew of Gelis' connection
with the Vatachino and skillfully played with it; further, all
his projects in Scotland, from the nativity play and the Iceland
expedition which brought him a barony, to more secret investments
of the bank's and the country's money in worthless mines, poisoned
grains, and debased coinage, were meant in fact to financially
wreck the country whose gentry, the St Pol/Semples, had terrified
and rejected Nicholas' mother, and Nicholas himself, thirty years
before.
He has carried out this plan because he could: he could not draw
back from it because it was his. In this final spectacle, the
work of an angry child, of an obsessed artist, even his friends
believe they see the death of Nicholas' soul, and desert him.
Stunned by his own dire success, Nicholas agrees with them: as
the novel ends and the abandoned and pitiless banker allows himself
to be carried East by the newly ascendant emperor of Germany,
he seems ready for burial. Or, possibly, resurrection.
If he seeks his grave, there is no lack of deadly alternatives
available: the perils of ruthless private enterprise with pirates
like Paúel Benecke, or of the ever-beckoning Eastern Crusade which
was the dream of another of Nicholas' mentors, Cardinal Bessarion,
now dead, and the latter's hairy acolyte Friar Ludovico. If there
is to be a renewal of spirit, there are incentives to this as
well. The alienated but still beloved family of Gelis and Jodi,
who are still endangered by the St Pols. The now-engaged young
people, Kathi and Robin, who remember stubbornly that the Machiavellian
Nicholas did, after all, momentarily desert his Scottish plans
and the Scottish King James, whom he did not love, to go, tragically
too late, to the side of the Venice-threatened Cypriot King James,
whom he did love. The handsome and exasperating Julius and the
Countess Anna, his loving and beautiful wife. Or perhaps renewal
will be triggered by a more mysterious set of forces, crystallized
in the mystics and astrologers drawn to Nicholas and in the sometimes
devastating shafts of foreknowledge through which Nicholas seems
to be excavating the buried trauma of his own nativity.
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