by Kate Elliott
There was silence again.
“I’ve got to get my makeup on,” she said finally. She sat down and dabbed on foundation with her fingers.
“It’s amazing,” said Marco. She watched him watch her in the mirror. “You’d never know to see Veselov now what terrible injuries he suffered. Even that awful facial scar is gone.”
With a sponge, she blended the foundation on over her cheeks. Over her scar. “Yes,” she replied.
The silence was worse than the talking, and there wasn’t even Hal’s argument with his father to cover it.
“Diana—”
She set down the damp sponge. “Marco. I’m sorry. I treated you horribly. I’m sorry. It wasn’t deliberate, but still, that doesn’t excuse it.”
He lifted his hand from the table and closed it into a fist and, slowly, opened, it again. Then he walked over and put his hands on her shoulders and met her eyes in the mirror. “Diana. I love you. I thought—I’m asking … we could handfast, just a trial, one year….” He faltered.
She stared at him, only she wasn’t staring at him, she was staring at his reflection, as if that was all she had ever seen of him, of Marco Burckhardt, the reflection she had made of him in her own mind. Not the real Marco. She had never known the real Marco. Maybe she had never really tried to know him, preferring the legend to the man.
In that moment, the dam broke.
“I wanted him to die,” she whispered. “I wanted him to die a clean romantic death. Then I wouldn’t have had to leave him because he would have been dead. I’m ashamed. I’m so ashamed of that. Do you know that he thought he couldn’t die as long as I was with him? By leaving him, I as good as sent him to his death.”
“Diana, they’re at war. People expect to die.”
“That doesn’t absolve me. It’s all I can think about, wondering if I’ll ever hear.”
“It’s been over a year. I thought you’d have—done all your grieving by now.”
“I know. I know. I thought I had. We left the jaran at Winter Solstice, did you know that? Our calendar, not theirs.” She put a hand to her bracelet and twisted it, twice around. It was the bracelet he had given her, opulent and showy enough that Joseph had given her permission to wear it as part of Zenocrate’s costume. “That was my penance, to wear the mark for a year and then let him go. And now I’m afraid to do it. I’m afraid if I erase the mark, that I’ll kill him.”
He took his hands off her shoulders. “Do you miss him?”
“I don’t know. We had nothing in common, really, except we were both pretty and blond.” She laughed at that, and heard herself how false the laugh sounded. “And I liked him. That’s what I realized finally, after it was too late. After I’d already left. Maybe it was never more than infatuation. Maybe I was just in love with him being in love with me. But I liked him, too. And, Goddess, every day, there are Karolla and the children, like a constant reminder. And poor Yevgeni, struggling to make sense of it all. And Vasil, who I’d like to strangle. He’s got it into his head that since I’m one of the leads that he has to sleep with me in order to consolidate his position, but at least I know it’s not just me. Gwyn has been fending him off, too. They’re always there, reminding me.”
“Then leave the Company.”
“But, Marco, I don’t want to leave the Company. We’re doing repertory for six months, and then there’s the chance that we’ll get to tour out into Imperial space. You must know about that. Owen is hoping that we’ll be the first humans ever allowed to perform before the emperor himself.”
Marco snorted. “Owen has grandiose dreams.”
“Someone must,” she said bitterly.
She saw him swallow, saw the movement of his throat. His hand slid under his jacket and he drew out a thin rectangular slab—no, she recognized it an instant later. It was paper, all folded up.
“I brought this,” he said in a low voice. “I thought maybe you wouldn’t want to see it, but—” He tossed it on the counter and turned and paced back to stand by the table, setting his hand flat down on the surface and staring at it. “It’s a letter from Tess Soerensen.”
A letter from Tess Soerensen.
There was only one thing it could be. Tess Soerensen had taken pity on her and written to tell her of Anatoly’s death. She stared at the creamy, stiff parchment. She did not have the courage to open it up and read the words, because set so baldly on the page, black ink on pale paper, such words could never be erased. Yet those words would allow her to rest. And anyway, she owed it to Anatoly to use the courage she had, to honor his memory.
Tears blurred her eyes as she opened it. It crackled as she unfolded it, and the noise of it opening resounded in the room. Tess Soerensen had a neat, readable hand, but then, she had doubtless had a great deal of practice writing by hand in the last five years.
“To Diana Brooke-Holt. From Terese Soerensen. Dear Diana, Anatoly Sakhalin is sitting with me and he asked me to write these words to you: My beloved Diana, I have tried for months now to get myself killed in battle, but it’s no use, I can’t seem to manage it. The gods watch over me too well. They know I married a Singer. After all, they sent you to me. Now they’re punishing me for my arrogance in thinking I could let you leave and not suffer for it. Now my grandmother and the prince want me to marry a jaran noblewoman from Jeds, to act as regent there. But I am married to you for as long as I live or the mark of marriage remains on your face, and since the mark can never be erased from a woman’s face and I am still alive, then therefore I am still married. It is true that I am a prince of the Eldest Tribe of the jaran, but there are other Sakhalin princes who can ride to war or act as regents. I am the only one married to a Singer. I would ask you, that if you desire it, that I leave the tribes and journey across the seas to return to you, my angel.
“I have explained to Anatoly what he must give up in order to go. He will not be a prince there. His name, his grandmother’s name, will make no difference to anyone, and the privileges he receives here as part of a princely family, which he never thinks of because he takes them so completely for granted, will all be missing there. I hope you realize how great a sacrifice that would be for him. You must remember that the other jaran who left the tribes and are now on Earth gave up nothing, because they had nothing to give up anymore, being what the jaran call arenabekh, black riders, which also means, the orphaned ones.
“As well, he can’t read or write or use a modeler. He knows nothing about the world he would be living in, and you would be his only anchor. He could never return to Rhui, not as long as the interdiction holds, and since it would be cruel to withhold from him the life extension treatments, he would live, beside you, for a long long time. I myself can’t recommend that you encourage him to leave the jaran. It will be hard for him to stay here, but I trust that in time he’ll see the wisdom of your choice, and our choice, and marry again. Anatoly has in any case agreed to abide by your decision. I hope this finds you well and flourishing. Regards, Tess.
Then, below this and written in an entirely different, almost painstakingly-precise handwriting, was another sentence, this one in Rhuian rather than Anglais. “I beg your indulgence for addressing you in this impertinent fashion, Diana, but I hope you will at least for a moment look at this as a man would and not let that damned female practicality push aside the feelings of the heart. This was signed simply, Ilyakoria Bakhtiian.
At the bottom, someone had traced onto the paper the outline of the earring Anatoly had given to her, and she back to him. It was like a signature. It was a promise.
The five minute call came up on the theater screen. “Oh, hell.” Her hands shook, but she forced herself to put the letter down. She took in three breaths to steady herself and then started furiously applying makeup, eyes first. “I come on in scene two. Oh, damn.”
The door burst open and Joseph charged in. “Di! Your hair! Where’s your wig? You didn’t give your ready call—” He jerked to a halt, seeing Marco. A look of quick sympathy pas
sed over his face. “I will go out,” he announced. “In sixty seconds I will come back in.” The door shut behind him.
Diana set down her pencil and rose and turned to face Marco.
“What are you going to do?” he asked. “Tess told me what was in the letter, more or less. I agreed to deliver it because…well, because I was coming here, and we had to hand-deliver it. You’ll have to burn it, you know. We can’t leave any evidence that she’s alive where the Chapalii might find it.”
It was a grandiose dream she had had, two years ago, meeting him and wondering if he and she, the hardened explorer and the young adventurous actor—Goddess, it was a horrible cliché, and maybe that was why it had gone so badly. But he deserved honesty. And she had a play to perform.
“Marco, I don’t know what I’m going to do. But don’t wait for me. I can’t promise you anything, not yet, maybe not ever.” Then she crossed over and kissed him, once, lightly.
The door opened. “Scene over,” said Joseph. “So sorry. Out. Di, damn it anyway.” The wig mistress charged in and stuffed Diana’s hair into the wig cap and then peeled the wig on over the cap. Joseph stood over Diana while she blended on the base to cover the seam and finished with her mouth and eyes, and did the rouge. At some point during this frantic activity she saw Marco move, in the mirror, and leave, that quietly. He left a single red rose behind him, on the table.
“Stand!” ordered Joseph. He dressed her in the swathes of robes that Zenocrate, the daughter of the Soldan of Egypt, wore on her first entrance, led in by the great conqueror Tamburlaine as his captive and intended mistress.
The cue light came on above the door.
“I’ll guide you up the stairs,” said Joseph.
In the darkness backstage, he gave her hand into Vasil Veselov’s. They entered.
It was a good, attentive audience, eager to be enthralled by the story and patient enough, with both parts of Tamburlaine before them, to be forgiving of Vasil’s novice errors, snags in the way the energy ran, a focus thrown the wrong way, a glance held too long, although never, ever, a missed line.
To be fair to Vasil, he performed well, very well, considering how short a time he had been acting. The part was made for him, of course. She knew who he was playing. He wasn’t playing Tamburlaine, he was playing Ilyakoria Bakhtiian, the way he moved, the way he turned his head, the way the sword swayed at his hips, the way he looked toward the heavens when he spoke of his destiny—Vasil had studied Bakhtiian so closely that he had internalized Bakhtiian’s bearing, his tone, almost his whole being. But for his fair hair and his beautiful, flawless face, he might have been Bakhtiian, cruder, even a little comic in his excesses, but a man bent on conquering the world. It was easy enough, as Zenocrate, to fall in love with his power.
They ate dinner backstage in the two-hour break between Part One and Part Two. Yevgeni came backstage. He always did. He as good as haunted Hyacinth wherever he went, except when he worked. Yomi had found the young rider employment at a cobbler’s shop, building handcrafted boots, and he seemed happy enough there and proud of his work. But then, he came from a common family. Diana tried to imagine Anatoly making boots for a living, and could not.
“Places!” Yomi announced. They went back on, for Part Two.
Zenocrate dies.
“Black is the beauty of the brightest day,
The golden ball of heaven’s eternal fire,
That danced with glory on the silver waves …
For amorous Jove hath snatched my love from hence,
Meaning to make her stately queen of heaven …
Behold me here, divine Zenocrate,
Raving, impatient, desperate and mad …
Come down from heaven and live with me again!”
In the end, Tamburlaine himself cannot triumph over his own mortality. He takes ill, he fights and wins his final battle, and when he admits at last that death is upon him, he calls on his men to bring in the hearse of Zenocrate.
From the hearse, lying still, visible to the audience and yet disguised somewhat by the frosted glastic walls, Diana watched Vasil give his final speech. She watched him cry. Not for himself. Tess Soerensen was wrong about one thing, at least: It wasn’t true that Vasil hadn’t given up anything. This much Diana had learned—obliquely—from Karolla. Vasil had simply given up the only thing—the only person—he had ever truly loved outside of himself.
“For Tamburlaine, the Scourge of God must die.”
He died, and still tears leaked from his eyes as Hal spoke the final lines. “Let heaven and earth his timeless death deplore. For both their worths can equal him no more.”
Vasil was crying for what he had lost, and for what Ilyakoria Bakhtiian would never know.
Diana cried, too, because Tess Soerensen was, after all, right. Anatoly couldn’t come to Earth. It would be cruel, above all else. Anatoly belonged on Rhui, just as she belonged here. He had agreed to abide by her decision, and though so often he found some way to make the decision fall the way he wanted it to, this time she had to make the choice. She knew what her decision must be. It was time to let him go.
CHAPTER FORTY
DAVID LIKES MEROE TRANSFER Station because he had designed it. Together with his two codesigners, he had worked in a unifying motif of huge pyramidal chambers and buttresses in the open concourses that resembled giant wings, all linked by an enclosed stream that ran through most of the station. He had managed to weasel out enough money from the design budget to commission fifty artists from varying disciplines to decorate the interior, with serpents and rams and giraffes, groves of date palms and acacia trees, sandstone statues and intricate mosaics of fused glass inlaid into gold.
Twenty years later, he still liked it, he decided as he strolled through Concourse Axum on his way to the gate from which he would take ship back to Odys, and Charles.
He wished Nadine could see it. He would have liked to share it with her, to show her how it interlocked, how the architecture and the ornamental motifs reflected each other, how the dimensionality of building in space both freed and limited the engineer. Had it really only been eighteen months since he had left her? It seemed like one month, she remained so clear in his mind. It seemed like a hundred years.
Impatient with himself and these pointless reflections, he tapped his one piece of luggage against his leg. The plastine tube thudded gently against his thigh, light but sturdy. It contained three hand-drawn maps that David and Rajiv had done together, to send on to Rhui, to Tess. They were ostensibly a map of the principality of Jeds, a detailed map of the city, and a detailed map of the palace of Morava and its grounds, based on his survey, but coded into the key was a secondary matrix on which Tess would build a secondary architecture for the saboteur network based on the architecture and layout of the palace of Jeds, the palace of Morava, and—although this wasn’t mapped—the traditional spiral layout of a jaran camp, which made the arrangement of tents look haphazard until one divined the pattern by which they were set up.
Under a winged buttress, he paused to admire his second favorite sculpture, this one done in light, in three dimensions, by the famous artist Surya Neve Lao. It depicted the Meroite queen, the Candace Amanirenas, as she directed a dawn attack on the Roman garrison at Syene together with her son, Prince Akinidad. Silhouetted against the flames rising within the garrison walls, David recognized a woman as she tipped back her head and stared up at the sculpture curling back along the concourse wall.
“Diana!” he cried.
She turned and blinked at him for a moment. Behind her, the battle raged endlessly on, never to be lost, never to be won.
“David!” She smiled suddenly and it seemed that the whole concourse was brightened by her. She hurried over to him, and they embraced.
“Where are you off to?” he asked. “When I left Rajiv, he said the Repertory Company was in Bangkok. You haven’t left them, have you?”
“No, I—” She hesitated and glanced behind at the sculpture, then back at
him. To his surprise, she still wore the scar of marriage on her face. Right now, she looked nervous, and even a little embarrassed. “I’m meeting someone. At Scarab Gate.”
“Oh, I’ll walk you. I’m leaving through Antelope Gate, and it’s right next door. Anyway, my favorite sculpture is at Scarab Gate.”
“Your favorite sculpture? Do you go through Meroe often? You must be quite the traveler.”
David grinned. Oh, well. He was proud of his work, and it was worth being proud of. “I designed it.”
“This station!”
One of the things David loved about Diana was that her emotions were so wonderfully distinct. He laughed.
“But it’s wonderful! Why did you make the buttresses like that, like they’re wings?”
“Because they are wings. They’re the wings of the Goddess.” So they walked to Scarab Gate and he told her about the design and the arguments and compromises and the choices that had gone into building Meroe Transfer Station.
A beautiful bronzed arch made of huge linked scarabs bridged the concourse wall that led into the steep, four-walled chamber that was Scarab Gate and a lounge for departing and arriving passengers. A second scarab arch, smaller and less ornate, sealed off the port tube that led to the pier and the locks.
“Where are you going?” Diana asked finally.
“I’m going to Odys. Business for Charles.”
Diana smiled. “His Nibs. That’s what Maggie O’Neill always called him. Where is she?”
“There. On Odys.”
“Ah,” said Diana, and that was another thing David liked about her. She knew when he had said as much as he could say.
“Here it is. My favorite sculpture.”
She stopped. “It’s very simple.”
It was simple, a simple gray sandstone statue of a young Candace, a queen, a resolute soldier bearing a sword and wearing a crown. To David, that statue was Nadine; not that it looked anything like her, but that it captured her spirit.
“I like the way the sculptor has suggested hair just by using hatching,” said Diana.