by M C Scott
‘Where did you come from?’ Akakios stood behind her, so close that she could smell garlic and wine on his breath. She turned to face him, slowly, so that she might not seem afraid. He looked just as he did in the compound, only that his bitter face and high brow reddened a little in the firelight, and here he smiled more readily than usual.
‘I walked in through the alley that leads to this man’s door.’ She spoke as if the door were the obvious entrance and they should know of it. Evidently, they did not.
At Akakios’ furious signal, two of his five guards sprinted down the corridor and into the alley, dragging their weapons free as they ran. They were all dressed as slaves or minor merchants, but they were Romans: wiry, dark-haired men with the arrogance of the conqueror in their every step.
A limed oak bench stood nearby. In other times, Hannah had sat on it and listened to the music of the fountains, of the stars, of her lover’s heartbeat.
Now, one of the remaining guards sat on it, tending the brazier. Shoving him off, she hauled the bench across the marble floor to give respite to Ptolemy Asul’s feet. The wave of relief that swept his body and as the weight was taken from his nail-bound arms was heart-breaking. Blood slid down on to the pale wood.
‘What is it you want?’ Hannah spoke without turning, her voice acid with scorn. ‘I’ll tell you, and then we can set about healing him.’
‘Not heal …’ That from Asul, a whisper.
‘Oh, my dear man …’ Reaching up, she touched Ptolemy’s forehead, high up, near the line of his hair where there was no damage. He flinched. She said, ‘Why don’t you tell them? Nothing is worth this, surely?’
‘He seeks … the date for … Rome to burn. I was the copyist. Never … knew the date.’
He could barely speak. He must have screamed a great deal, here in this hidden house with its so-quiet walls that let loose no sound. He had been her almost-brother, the older voice in her childhood that had offered friendship when she had none, and later, when she had found more than friendship, he had given her a trysting place to meet her lover when others wanted them kept apart, to follow other paths.
‘Han …?’
That was a whisper, barely a breath. She could feel the silent plea from the spaces where his eyes had been.
Hannah carried a knife. Even Ajax did not know that, but Ptolemy Asul had always known, and wanted her to use it.
She used her body to shield the movement of her hand. ‘Go well, my love.’
She spoke in the language of the past, that only the Sibyls knew. On the last word, she sliced fast at his throat.
But not fast enough.
‘I think not!’
Akakios snatched at her hand, wrenched and twisted. The knife clattered to the floor and Hannah was thrown after it, crushing her cheek to the marble. A shod foot pressed on her neck, holding her down.
Akakios stood over her. ‘For wielding a weapon in the presence of the emperor’s envoy, you are sentenced to death,’ he said pleasantly. ‘In the emperor’s absence, the manner of execution is mine to decide. Take her.’
There were no more planks and they could not nail her on to marble, but used rope and bound her to the pillar alongside Ptolemy Asul, with its carvings of lotus flowers and irises. Pain racked her shoulders. Her own pulse crashed in her ears. Her bowels loosened but did not yet leak. She found she did still care about humiliation.
Akakios came to study her face, feeding on the signs of fear. She did not know how to erase them. The fire etched fresh lines about his own mouth, accentuating the beak of his nose so that he became a vulture, added to those of the morning; a tenth, sign of treachery in business.
‘Perhaps now he’ll think differently.’ Stepping back to the brazier, he lifted a padded leather glove from a rack beneath and slid it on to his left hand. In the glowing coals, an array of knives and pokers lay white with heat.
‘Were you his lover?’ he asked.
‘Ptolemy Asul’s?’ By a miracle, she was able to laugh. ‘Hardly. He’s my friend.’
‘But he loves you,’ Akakios observed. ‘Always a useful trait in a man. What will he do, do you think, to keep you unblemished?’
With a sudden movement, he kicked the pale oak bench away from under Ptolemy’s feet. The man dropped, sickeningly, on to his riveted arms. The noise he made then was not one Hannah had heard from any living thing. She found she was weeping, and could not stop.
When, at last, he could be heard, Akakios said, ‘Ptolemy, listen to me. I will take her nose first, and then her tongue. If she lives, she will walk out of here condemned to a life of silent, disfigured harlotry. You know I will do as I say. To stop it, give me what I need by the count of three. One …’
White iron crisped the air in front of Hannah’s face. Her hair burned. She felt her skin already blister.
‘Two …’
She fought to keep her head away. One of the guards caught the back and forced it forward.
‘Three … Hold her …’ White-hot iron jabbed at her, smoking. Shamefully, she screamed. It was impossible not to.
‘No! I can tell you—’ The iron stopped moving. Hannah stared at it, petrified.
‘Go on.’
Afterwards, when she dreamed, as she did many times, of that afternoon, it was the mild curiosity in Akakios’ voice that woke her, sweating, to stare into the dark.
Ptolemy was straining round, trying to make his blind eyes see her. ‘In Hades. You will find the date only in Hades.’
‘Hades? Are we children, afraid of the dark? You’ll have to do better than that.’
The iron moved again. Hannah felt her skin blister. Somewhere, she heard Ptolemy cry out, and then a woman’s voice, her own.
‘Stop! He’s telling the truth!’ Words spilled from her, disorderly. ‘The Sibyls tend the Oracle of Hades in the heart of the city. It was here long before Alexander and Ptolemy. For a thousand generations the Oracle has spoken there. Only now, under Rome, is it silent.’
The iron went away far enough to stop the scorching. Mesmerized, Hannah watched the white-hot metal cool to straw, to amber, to the darker colour of autumn Nile honey. Tears burned her cheeks where the skin was broken. She had not soiled herself yet. She didn’t care.
Akakios looked from her to Ptolemy Asul and back. ‘Am I to understand that the Sibyls wrote the prophecy?’
‘Yes.’ Ptolemy had found his voice. More strongly than before, he said, ‘The Oracle can tell you the date on which Rome must burn. I don’t know it. I never have.’
‘But you can gain me access to the Sibyls?’
‘No.’ Ptolemy Asul shook his head.
Sighing theatrically, Akakios laid his cooling iron on the charcoal and selected another, hotter. ‘Truly, if you think there are limits to what—’
‘There are,’ Hannah said, desperately. ‘There are limits that will not change whatever you do to either of us. Only a woman can lead a petitioner to the Oracle.’
Ptolemy Asul said, ‘Only Hannah.’
‘Ah.’ Akakios stepped close. His eyes fed on her face. The heat of the iron blistered her hand and neither of them noticed it. ‘Is this true?’
Hannah dared not look across at the hanged man opposite. ‘I know where to go, yes.’
‘And you will take me.’
‘I—’
‘You will take me because I hold the lives of those you love in the palm of my hand.’ Akakios dropped the iron. It lay dully hot near her feet. With a sweep of his knife, he cut away the cords that bound her. His smile was terrifying in its triumph. ‘You will guide me in and guide me out and if I get what I want it may be that I will allow—’
A guard coughed, suddenly, as if in warning. Akakios swung round in time to catch the man as he fell backwards, vomiting blood. He died at Hannah’s feet.
Two figures loomed in the doorway. Akakios shouted an order Hannah did not hear, but the sun was in her eyes so the last thing she saw was two figures hammering in through the ruin of the door, a
nd then there was nothing but the after-image of Ptolemy Asul’s hanging body – and Akakios, who stood in front of her with the point of his knife resting on the bone beneath her eye.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
They had caught the stink of pain and burned flesh even before Shimon eased open the door. Pantera stepped ahead of him into a hot, bright courtyard full of men and threw both knives. The first missed. The second struck a guard in the chest, catching him on the angle as he spun round, and he fell backwards. The space where he had been revealed a tableau from Pantera’s worst nightmare: a crucified man and Hannah tied to a pillar and Akakios standing between them, ready to kill.
‘Hannah!’ he shouted.
Akakios grinned at him. His knife shone at her cheek.
‘Math needs us first.’ Shimon caught Pantera’s arm, wrenching him round. ‘By the far pillar. The guard has him.’
The guard held Math in front, like a shield, twisting the boy’s arm up behind his back with his sword blade under his chin. He was backing towards a door on the far side of the courtyard. Math was limp as a kitten, staring down at the sword with the numbed terror of the condemned.
Shimon had spoken in Aramaic, which none of the guards understood. There was a moment’s confused hesitation, then Pantera, who did understand, dived forward, rolling, and scooped up the first knife that had missed and lay now on the floor.
Coming upright again, he hurled the blade before his mind had time to tell him it was an impossible throw, that he might as easily hit Math as the guard, that the man was a war-scarred legionary and could duck a blade in his sleep, that—
His knife hit the guard’s left eye, striking so hard the tip pierced his skull at the back. He crumpled where he stood, dead too fast to cry out. Even as he fell, Pantera was tumbling across the floor like a circus acrobat to sweep Math out and away from the killing blade that shaved the skin on his throat.
They rolled together, Math held close in Pantera’s arms, spinning and spinning, close as lovers, as father and son, heartbeat to heartbeat, both of them afraid. Blades passed them close. None of them hit.
A fourth guard fell nearby, his throat a bright fountain. His blood glued them tighter together.
One left, then, and Akakios. And Hannah.
In his measured Aramaic, Shimon said, ‘Akakios has gone. Hannah is alive. We have one man left to kill.’
A shadow passed over Pantera. He stopped rolling, released Math and stood up. The last living guard was caught between him and Shimon, his head swinging back and forth like a cornered lion’s. He had a sword in one hand and a knife in the other. Neither Pantera nor Shimon was armed any longer; their knives were lost in the bodies of dead men.
Pantera put Math behind him. The blade dropped by the guard who had held Math was an arm’s length from his right foot. In his own rusty Aramaic he said, ‘If you claim his attention, I’ll get the blade.’
‘He’s wearing a mail shirt, you’ll have to take his legs or his throat. Are you ready? Go – now!’
Pantera felt the bruises as he rolled this time, but he came up with the sword’s bloody hilt clutched in both fists. The guard was doing his best to kill Shimon, stabbing at him alternately with his left and right hand, so that when Pantera, sliding sideways, hacked at the backs of his knees he didn’t jump as he might have done, but only twisted away, so that the blade bit deep into one calf, cutting the muscle through to the bone, taking that leg from under him.
Pantera lost the sword again; the hilt was too slick to hold. The guard’s knife slashed at his face, seeking his eyes. Screaming the war cry of the Dumnonii, Pantera leapt forward, grasped the man’s head under the chin and behind the crown and, using his own body as a lever, broke his neck.
Pantera stood slowly, lowering the body to the ground. The courtyard swayed around him, the shimmering colours nauseatingly bright. The sweet-iron smell of blood clogged his gorge.
‘My life for yours. I had not thought to have another fight like that, so late in life.’ Shimon was standing an arm’s reach away, looking drawn and satisfied in equal measure. He offered Pantera his hand and they grasped, fist to elbow, in a grip that spanned continents and cultures, and spoke of the brotherhood of slaughter.
It helped to make the world still, and to steady Pantera’s stomach, so that the clarity of battle went away, and he was left slow again, and able to think.
Hannah was on the floor, sitting with her back to the pillar, regarding him with glazed eyes as if he were as monstrous as the men he had killed. Ptolemy Asul hung dead from his makeshift crucifix. A neat wound less than a finger’s width across to the left of his sternum showed how he died.
Pantera said, ‘I had not thought Akakios had any mercy in him.’
‘He doesn’t,’ Shimon said. ‘Look what she’s holding.’
Hannah’s hand was wrapped around a small-bladed woman’s knife. Her knuckles were white and shaking.
‘Hannah …’
Pantera walked the ten feet between them slowly, no longer certain what he read in her eyes, afraid that she might turn the knife inward on her own breast before he could reach her.
‘I’m sorry we were too late to save him. But Math’s unhurt, and you …’ He didn’t know what they had done to her. He crouched at her side, not too close. ‘Can you give me the knife?’
She shook her head, but let it slide into his palm. Tentatively, he took her hand. She was shaking lightly all over, like a horse in a thunderstorm. Her eyes were on Math.
Shimon was with him, talking to him as an equal, explaining how well he had acted, how he had the capacity to be a fighter one day if he chose, but that there were better ways to live if he didn’t. The colour was returning to his cheeks. Hannah’s glance skipped across Math’s face, as if seeing him whole was as much as she could bear.
She said, ‘Will you take him down, please? He should have dignity now.’ She didn’t look round at the man whose life she had ended. Pantera thought perhaps she couldn’t.
‘Of course.’ He had already selected which irons from the brazier would best lever the nails from the dead man’s arms.
Shimon, who had more experience of taking down the bodies of crucified men, came to help. They laid Ptolemy Asul on the bench at his feet, with his arms crossed on his breast in the Egyptian way. Pantera found a dagger and cut away the tunic from a dead guard to lay over and cover the worst of his wounds, and took pennies from his own purse to lay on the still-open eyelids.
When he was done, he turned back to Hannah. ‘Can you tell us why they did this? What question was it that so badly needed an answer?’
Hannah stared past him. ‘Can’t you guess? They asked for the date on which Rome must burn to fulfil the prophecy. Ptolemy told them he didn’t know it, that he was the copyist, not the maker of the prophecy. He told them that the Oracle of Hades, which lies in the Temple of Truth beneath the Serapeum, could tell them what they need to know.’ She drew a hoarse breath. ‘I said I would take Akakios there.’
‘You can’t do that,’ Shimon said. ‘With what he has done even here, he would die before he ever reached the Oracle. And you with him.’
But Pantera had seen where her gaze was resting. Math was standing between two columns with the wreckage of a broken brazier at his feet and his wide, grey eyes fixed on Hannah’s, as hers were on his.
‘She has no choice. Akakios holds Math and Ajax as hostages to her good behaviour. Am I right?’
‘Yes. He’ll kill them if I don’t take him in. At least if we both die, they will be free.’
Saying it broke something, so that Hannah could stand up at last, and, slowly, turn round to look where she had not. She said, ‘He died to protect us, even as he lived.’
‘No.’ Pantera caught her hand. ‘Ptolemy Asul died because of a prophecy he was made to copy. Akakios’ men were hunting it, and so found this place. I knew of the danger, but came to late to save him. If there’s a blame, it’s mine.’
‘Ptolemy knew they were
coming. I think he’s always known it would end here, even when we were young.’ Her eyes were closed. ‘He opened his house to us when we wanted to be alone. He made us his sisters. He would have done anything, I think, that we asked of him.’
Pantera lowered her hand. ‘We?’
‘Hypatia and me. We came here together. We were lovers.’ Hannah opened her eyes. ‘He lied,’ she said, in wonder. ‘Even after all they’d done to him, all they were doing, Ptolemy Asul lied to Akakios.’
‘What was the nature of his lie?’ Shimon was the one to ask it. Pantera could not.
‘He told them I was the only one who could petition the Oracle. That I alone could lead a man to the Styx.’ She smiled, thinly. ‘They don’t know that Hypatia exists. She can do more than I ever could, but Ptolemy didn’t tell them.’
‘Why?’ Pantera had found his voice, and wished he had not. A cold weight was settling on him, becoming more solid by the moment.
‘They wanted you to go to the Oracle, too. He and Hypatia.’
‘Why should I have any greater chance than Akakios of crossing the Styx alive?’
‘Your soul is … less damaged than his.’
Pantera closed his eyes. ‘How will I find Hypatia?’
‘Put a garland of wild irises on the idol of Hathor at the alley’s entrance. She’ll find you.’ Hannah spoke to Pantera, but her eyes still rested on Ptolemy’s blue-grey body. ‘We should burn him. It would have been his choice.’
There was very little wood in the garden. Pantera looked about. ‘We could break up the bench he’s lying on, but—’
‘Math and I will find wood and things to burn if you and Shimon get the brazier ready. There’s more charcoal in an iron bucket by the outer door.’
With a kiss and a gentle shepherding, Hannah gathered Math into the house while Pantera and Shimon built up the brazier again to an orange heat. Hannah returned presently, bearing linens to make a shroud. Math followed, bearing wood for a pyre.
‘We’ll burn him here, near the pool, so that the house is not destroyed,’ Hannah said. ‘You two should go to the library and read the note on his desk. He has left you each a gift: to Pantera, the dancing Cleopatra in gold, and to Shimon the Scroll of Life. You each know how to find what is yours.’