Ilario, the Stone Golem

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Ilario, the Stone Golem Page 10

by Mary Gentle


  a rivet home.

  ‘This isn’t legal!’

  ‘You’d think so, wouldn’t you?’ I watched, arms folded, the cloak

  warmly wrapped about me. ‘But Venice has always been able to put

  prisoners and captives of war into her galleys as slaves. It’s legal to buy a

  prisoner as a slave in Venice. Provided you don’t stay on Frankish

  territory. Perhaps they didn’t mention that when you studied law? It’s

  true all the same.’

  He couldn’t struggle in the two men’s grip, but it didn’t stop him

  trying. ‘Why do you want me enslaved? What use am I as a slave?’

  He hasn’t realised what has happened to him, even though the collar is

  now around his neck.

  Some don’t. I have seen men whipped until the blood runs before they

  realise that their freedom has gone. That they’re property. I wondered

  what it would take to make it clear to Ramiro Carrasco de Luis.

  In Iberian I said, ‘You’ll know one thing about the law of slavery, I

  don’t doubt. What happens when the owner of a slave is murdered?’

  The chime of the hammer fixing the second rivet all but drowned his

  words:

  ‘The household slaves are tortured—’

  ‘Tortured. Why? Why not questioned?’

  ‘Because it’s assumed all slaves lie; it’s a legal assumption—’

  I saw it hit him.

  If Ilario dies, I am a household slave; I will be tortured.

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  Not even because they assume a slave committed the murder, but

  simply that a slave will not be trusted to be honest because they’re a slave.

  Ramiro Carrasco looked up at me with wide dark eyes.

  I watched him as I spoke. ‘If something were to happen to me, if I

  were to die – even if it was merely from a sickness . . . Then, my slaves

  will be turned over to the authorities, and tortured to find out what they

  know. And Ramiro Carrasco the slave won’t know anything about what

  killed me. But – interrogated men talk about everything they know, if

  they’re subjected to enough pain. Everything.’

  There was no need to say it aloud, in front of the jailor; I saw the

  understanding in Ramiro Carrasco’s expression.

  Everything. Including every order Aldro Videric ever gave you, when

  he told you to murder me.

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  10

  Outside the Doge’s palace, Tottola went to the Riva degli Schiavoni to

  summon a gondola. Attila crossed his arms, the end of the slave’s chain-

  leash held in one hand.

  Ramiro Carrasco blinked against the sunlight, weak as it was.

  It was clear enough to show up the filth caking him. He did not, for all

  he wore the same clothes, appear much to resemble the sardonic

  secretary of my sister Sunilda.

  Tears ran down his face, and he lifted both hands to wipe them, since

  his wrists were manacled together. I wondered if it was the brightness of

  the light.

  He shot a dazzled look at me. ‘My family—’

  I gazed back coolly. ‘As an owner, I can always volunteer my own slave

  for interrogation.’

  He took a step forward and Attila jerked the links of the chain through

  his fingers. The iron collar came up hard against Carrasco’s windpipe. I

  couldn’t help wincing in sympathy; I know how that feels.

  ‘Declared your slave . . . ’ There was a degree of wonder in his tone.

  No, he hasn’t realised the truth of it yet.

  ‘You have to stay with me now,’ I said, gently enough. ‘What we’re

  going to do with you, God knows. But you have to live with me, as my

  slave, so that if anything happens to me, all Videric’s dirty little facts get

  spilled out into the open. It’s a balance, a set of scales: if he kills me, everything comes out into the open.’

  Videric may know me well enough to know I only want to be left

  alone. But whether he believes it – whether he fears having knowledge at

  large, in my head, not safely in a hole in the ground . . .

  ‘You’re my precaution,’ I said. ‘And since you have to be a slave for it

  to work – then you are a slave. You don’t understand that yet, but I suppose you will.’

  Attila rumbled a brief, ‘Let me belt the cheeky bastard.’

  Ramiro Carrasco opened his mouth. And shut it again.

  ‘That’s right.’ I shrugged. ‘If I tell Attila here to beat you until your bones break – and if he was the kind of man to do it – I could order it right here, and no one could stop it happening. You have to understand this. You don’t have the legal protection of being a serf. You’re no more

  human than a horse or a chair.’

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  It was not my words that had the effect on him, I thought, but the

  sombre lack of surprise from Honorius’s soldier – a man whom Ramiro

  Carrasco would probably know, from his visits to Neferet’s house.

  ‘You . . . ’ Ramiro Carrasco turned his head and looked at me. His

  back straightened. Even under the filth, he had a certain amount of

  dignity. I wondered how much experience of slavery it would take to

  curve his spine, and make him – as I sometimes still do – lower my head

  automatically in the presence of the free.

  Ramiro Carrasco said, ‘You may have stopped him killing my mother

  and father.’

  ‘Yes.’

  Because if that news were to reach him, he would turn traitor to

  Videric freely; any man would.

  ‘But you had no way of knowing that I – that it was because . . . You

  couldn’t know!’

  I flicked back in the small hand-sewn pages of my sketchbook,

  abandoning an effort to draw the standing gondolier steering his craft in

  towards the steps. I found the page I wanted, and turned it towards

  Carrasco.

  He looked down at his own face, in a preliminary sketch for Gaius.

  ‘Look at that, Ramiro. Tell me that I didn’t know you weren’t doing this of your own accord.’

  His collared neck straightened; he stared at me with fierce affront.

  ‘ Drawing me? You couldn’t know anything about me!’

  Studying and reproducing the planes and features of a face, time after

  time, seeing how it subtly alters with each emotion . . . Once, I stopped

  midway through a charcoal drawing of Ramiro Carrasco, when I had put

  in the tone of his face, and only an outline of his hair. It made him look

  white-haired. I had thought, This is how Carrasco will look when he’s fifty.

  I stated, ‘You’ve never killed a man.’

  I saw the shock on his face.

  ‘If you can fight with a sword, it’s because you saw an arms master for

  a few weeks while you were at your university, and any new recruit

  would kill you inside two minutes. You were planning to stick a knife

  into me, because anybody can do that, surely? You’ve been delaying, delaying all the time, terrified that the Aldra would carry out his threats –

  I don’t know what reports you’ve been sending back to him, but I know

  you wanted to convince him you were just about to succeed. All the time,

  just on the verge of success.’

  The muscles that surround the jaw bone relax under shock. His mouth

  hung very slightly open. It wasn’t fair that it gave him a look that was faintly comic. Under these circumstances, that could move one to pity.
<
br />   ‘Yes, you could kill a man in self-defence,’ I hazarded. ‘No, you’re not

  an assassin. And Videric wouldn’t care what being a murderer would do

  to you. Why would he? Here you were – educated, so capable of taking a

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  place with Federico; capable of being blackmailed, therefore controllable;

  capable of getting close to the man-woman Ilario. You were perfect. But

  just . . . not a natural assassin.’

  Carrasco’s voice cracked with desperation. ‘Let me go back to

  Taraco! I don’t even know if they’re alive, if my father—’

  ‘They’re better protected from the Aldra while you’re here.’

  Videric would calmly and coldly work out that his weapon had turned

  in his hand, I knew. And would I put it past Videric to go into a white rage, and order his serfs slaughtered out of rage? It would be stupidity.

  But . . .

  Carrasco stared at me. I read the same knowledge in him. Yes, he

  knows Videric well. And wishes he didn’t.

  ‘I can’t guarantee anything,’ I said. ‘I’m sorry. I wish I could.’

  ‘You’re sorry?’ Ramiro Carrasco’s voice went up an octave.

  By his side, Attila looked thoughtfully at the chain-leash’s end. I shook

  my head. The exchange went right past Ramiro.

  Carrasco spluttered, ‘You’re sorry? I tried to smother you!’

  ‘Yes. I do remember.’

  The caustic remark was very much in his own vein. It stopped him

  dead.

  ‘Ilaria . . . You can do . . . whatever you like to me, can’t you? If you

  want revenge for me frightening you . . . ’

  He didn’t say for hurting you; he was perceptive enough to know which I would resent the more.

  I shrugged. ‘That’s one of the things about being a slave.’

  ‘And I can’t . . . ’ His dark eyes blinked against the spring sun, running

  clear water after the jail’s permanent dimness. ‘I can’t thank you for

  perhaps saving my family’s lives, either. Because you’ll just think I’m

  trying to escape a punishment.’

  ‘That’s another of the things about being a slave.’ I moved forward as

  the gondola came in to the steps. Looking back as I took Tottola’s

  extended hand, I said, ‘With slavery as you find it in Iberia, nothing

  honest can be said between slave and master.’

  Attila thrust Ramiro Carrasco into the boat behind me, the chain

  drawn up tight enough that he had the secretary-assassin by the neck,

  iron biting into the secretary’s prison-filthy flesh.

  Honorius and Rekhmire’ appeared on the Alexandrine house’s jetty

  before we got within fifty yards of the landing stage. They watched in

  silence, one standing beside the other, as the gondola glided up and we

  disembarked.

  ‘What?’ Honorius pointed at the stinking and wet figure crouching in

  the bottom of the boat – wet because Ramiro Carrasco de Luis had not

  entirely believed Tottola wouldn’t let go if he jumped over the side of the

  gondola.

  65

  Ramiro Carrasco coughed, shivered, and spat over the side, wiping his

  running nose.

  The royal book-buyer chimed in, ‘ Why? ’

  ‘I bought him,’ I said – and watched comprehension spread over their

  faces.

  66

  11

  ‘You’re a wonder!’ the Captain-General of Castile and Leon grinned,

  pulling me up out of the gondola and into his arms, and swinging me

  around in such a way that my scars pulled painfully – which I would not

  have told him for the world.

  ‘Well done!’ Rekhmire’ gave me a pat on the shoulder, when he might

  reach me. ‘Ilario – that was almost clever.’

  ‘Why, thank you!’ I mimed being offended, and gasped a little, under

  the impression my ribs might crack. Honorius released me. I added, ‘All

  I need to do now is get word back to Videric, to tell him.’

  A thought made me grin.

  ‘A shame Federico decided not to go back to Taraco – I would like to

  have seen his face, when I asked him to carry the message . . . ’

  Rekhmire’ openly snickered.

  ‘Shall we go in?’ I added.

  ‘What about him?’ Honorius jerked a thumb at my purchase.

  ‘He’s a slave, he has to be seen to be treated like one.’ I glanced at Rekhmire’. ‘I was thinking – along the lines of the Alexandrine model.

  Once we get out of Venice.’

  The book-buyer smiled, and inclined his head.

  Honorius continued loud congratulations while I introduced Carrasco

  to the kitchens and the soldiers, with stern words that the man should not

  be injured because valuable. I thought one or two of them entirely likely

  to give him more than a brain-fever, if left unwarned; attempting to

  murder a woman in child-bed is comfortably different enough from a

  soldier’s killing that they can safely feel the utmost contempt.

  Even if the woman is not wholly a woman.

  The late frost bit at my fingers as I returned from the courtyard,

  having shown Ramiro Carrasco the iron bars on the gate. I sent him off

  to Sergeant Orazi to be found a place to sleep. Rekhmire’ came up with

  me on my way to the main room, his steps more uneven now because of

  his less-than-successful attempts to use a walking-stick instead of his

  crutch.

  ‘Out with it!’ I directed, when we had reached the room and he had

  not yet spoken.

  Honorius looked up curiously from a joint-stool by the fire, evidently

  equally desirous of hearing the answer.

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  ‘I admire your initiative.’ Rekhmire’ racketed over to the room’s only

  armed chair, lurching like a town drunk at midday. ‘To conceive of

  buying Carrasco – and to put the plan into operation—’ He gave a faint

  smile. ‘It’s admirable. It’s worthy of a book-buyer.’

  ‘Spy!’ Honorius rubbed his fingers hard under his nose, preventing

  himself from laughing. He had ceased to be entirely clean-shaven in the

  last few days, and was growing a moustache. I assumed he thought it

  would disguise him, at least to be less recognisable at a distance. It came

  out a little greyer than the hair of his head.

  Having an ear for nuance, at least where the Egyptian is concerned, I

  smiled at my father, and turned back to Rekhmire’.

  ‘But? “It’s admirable” – and I hear a but.’

  Rekhmire’ sighed. ‘But it won’t work.’

  68

  29

  The four words dropped into the room and brought about complete

  silence.

  ‘ What do you mean, it won’t work! ’

  I checked the door and window by reflexive action. No Ramiro

  Carrasco; no guards or servants other than Honorius’s trusted men.

  ‘How can it not work?’

  ‘Consider.’ Rekhmire’ steepled his fingers in the old way he had had in

  Rome. ‘If you die, Carrasco is legally tortured, and Videric’s secrets

  come out. If Carrasco dies – nothing.’

  I stared at him. Able only to echo. ‘If Carrasco dies . . . ’

  ‘Dies first. All you’ve done,’ Rekhmire’ observed, ‘is given Videric a motive to have Carrasco assassinated before he kills you.’

  Into the stunned quiet, Honorius’s voice intoned, ‘Shite.�


  ‘I—’ The inescapability of it flooded in on me.

  ‘I wondered why he had been left alive,’ Rekhmire’ added, shifting

  uncomfortably on the hard chair. ‘It wouldn’t have been difficult to get a

  man into the prison to silence him. Evidently Videric didn’t consider him

  a danger. If you’ve made him into one . . . ’

  The Egyptian shrugged.

  ‘ . . . You ensure he will kill both of you.’

  ‘ No.’ I slammed one fist into my other hand. ‘I thought it out, every step of it! It will work. It’s a stand-off. All the while I have Ramiro Carrasco, Aldra Videric can’t touch me!’

  ‘All the while you have Carrasco,’ the Egyptian emphasised softly. ‘I grant you, it works while you do. But what you’ve done now is given

  Aldra Videric a reason to kill the slave before he kills you. And the easiest

  way to be sure of that, is to kill both you and he together.’

  To come so close to safety – so close—

  Despair went through me. I pushed it down, out of sight, so that the

  two men should not see it when I turned back to them.

  Honorius clearly forced himself to sound encouraging. ‘It’s a good

  plan, while it works.’

  Rekhmire’ very briefly smiled. Knowing him as I did, I thought it was

  an appreciation of the irony of the assassin Carrasco now become the

  target.

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  Frustration washed through me. I thought it no metaphor, now, that

  men’s vision goes red when they hate.

  ‘It doesn’t matter what I do!’ I snarled. ‘He’ll never get back into

  power, the King will never take him as First Minister again, but Videric

  is just going to keep on sending more men! He’ll send soldiers, he’ll – I

  don’t know – bribe a ship’s captain to maroon me – send a proper

  murderer who’s efficient enough to sneak through a military guard –

  something. Aldra Videric, he’ll just . . . keep on coming. Keep. On.

  Coming.’

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  30

  There has to be an answer.

  I can’t see it.

  Venice, which had seemed safe enough while I knew the freeman

  Ramiro Carrasco’s location and temper, seemed dangerous now.

  I thought there might also be an outside chance that, as a slave, he

  could still be able to hire men to kill me. But given the risk to his

 

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