Out of the waters bote-2

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Out of the waters bote-2 Page 15

by David Drake


  "I am here with my learned advisors…," Saxa said. "To inspect the Serapeum on this property."

  He turned slightly and indicated Varus and Pandareus with a sweeping gesture. This is probably the first time father has used the rhetorical training that I'm sure he got when he was my age.

  "If you will lead us to the chapel," Saxa continued, "we will finish our business and leave you to your privacy, Lord Tardus."

  "What?" squeaked Tardus. "I-this is a mistake! Saxa, I must ask you to leave my house immediately. You have been misinformed!"

  Pandareus looked up quizzically, as though he expected Varus to do something. Varus felt the crowed hall blur about him. There was barely room to move, but he found himself walking forward in the familiar fog.

  A bull snorted nearby. Varus turned his head sharply, but he could see nothing in the fog though the sound had come from very close. He walked on, picking his way past outcrops. Some of the rocks looked like statues, or anyway had human features.

  He wondered where the Sibyl was. Usually in these reveries, he would have come upon her by now.

  Varus heard the bull again, this time behind him, and glanced over his shoulder. The fog had cleared enough for him to see a figure that would have been a giant if its human body had not supported the horned head of a bull. It snorted angrily.

  A voluptuous woman reclined on the stony ground behind the creature. She caught Varus' startled expression and smiled lazily.

  He stepped into sunlight. The Sibyl held a small glass bottle in her left hand, the sort of container in which perfume was sold. Something moved inside it, but the glass was iridescent and Varus couldn't be sure he was seeing a tiny figure rather than the sloshing of liquid.

  He bowed formally to the old woman. "Sibyl," he said. "My father has entered the house of Sempronius Tardus, but the senator denies there is a chapel of Serapis in the property. Will you help me find the chapel, please?"

  The old woman's laughter was like the rasping of cicadas. She pointed with her right hand, down the craggy reverse slope of the ridge.

  "Why do you ask me to tell you things you already know, Lord Magician?" she said. "You stand beside the entrance now."

  Varus followed her gesture. He saw himself in the garden behind Tardus' house. The plantings were unusually extensive, covering a greater area than the building itself. Palms grew on either side, and water flowed down and back along a pair of lotus-filled channels in the center. The gazebo where Varus stood was between them, reached by small bridges to either side.

  Pandareus was on his right; his father was to the left. Tardus was with them, but all the other people visible in the garden were members of the consul's entourage. The household servants had vanished into corners of the house where they hoped to escape attention.

  "How…?" Varus said. Then he said, "Thank you, Sib-"

  As the final word came out of his mouth, he was again with his companions, beneath a dome supported by thick wooden columns shaped like papyrus stalks. Tardus stared at him numbly.

  "-yl."

  Varus blinked. His father and Pandareus were staring at him also: Saxa in concern, the teacher with keen interest.

  "I'm sorry," Varus said. He coughed, because his throat was raw. "I've been daydreaming, I'm afraid."

  "You have been repeating, 'There is a certain dear land, a nurturer for men,' Lord Varus," Pandareus said. "Repeating it quite loudly, in fact."

  "Shouting, my son," Saxa said. "I was rather worried about you."

  "And you led us here to this pavilion," said Pandareus, who beamed with cheerful satisfaction. Turning, he added to the waxen looking householder, "The motif is interesting, Lord Tardus."

  Varus looked at the gazebo into which he had walked unknowing. The domed ceiling had an opening in the center, but around that was a frieze of men in boats in a landscape of tall reeds. Some were hunting ducks with throwing sticks; others were trying to net the variety of fish shown swimming on a bottom register which was painted sea-green.

  "If that's meant to be the Nile," Pandareus said, musing aloud, "and I suppose it is, I would suggest that brown would have been a more suitable color. I recall thinking that it seemed thick enough to walk on."

  Varus grinned; neither of the other men reacted.

  The floor was a pavement of jasper chips in concrete, but in the center was round frame about a mosaic of a priest with a bronze rattle. Varus looked at it, then raised his eyes to Tardus.

  "There's a catch here," Tardus said, sounding as though he had received a death sentence. He opened a concealed panel in one of the columns, disclosing a lever. "You'll need to step off the mosaic."

  Varus, Pandareus, and a moment later Saxa as well stepped back between pairs of pillars.

  Tardus threw the lever. The circular mosaic sank into the darkness with a faint squeal. It must have been counterweighted, because it had not required more effort on the lever than to draw a bolt. Broad steps led downward; Varus couldn't see the bottom in the shadows.

  "I had forgotten this old grotto existed, Consul," Tardus said, looking distinctly ill. "I suppose it's been here for many years. Since my father's time, no doubt, or even longer."

  Tardus is an old man, thought Varus. That was true, of course, but in simple years he was younger than Pandareus. Official discovery of a banned chapel on his property seemed to have ripped all the sinews out of his limbs.

  "The worship of Serapis is legal nowadays, of course," said Saxa, apparently trying to calm his fellow senator.

  "There are now official temples of Sarapis in Carce, Lord Saxa," Pandareus said. "Note, however, that they have not been permitted within the religious boundary of the city. This chapel-"

  He gestured rhetorically. He was in his professorial mode again and probably didn't, Varus realized, notice the effect that his words were having on Tardus.

  "-could not be erected today or at any time after the Senatorial edict when Aemillius and Claudius were consuls."

  One of Saxa's footmen trotted out of the house, carrying a lighted lantern. Candidus waddled quickly behind him.

  Varus nodded approval. The deputy steward wouldn't demean himself by actually lifting an object, but he had thought far enough ahead to get lights as soon as he saw his master would be entering a crypt.

  The footman crossed the short bridge but stopped at the gazebo and held the lantern out. Saxa started to reach for it but paused and looked at his son.

  "I think I had best go down," Varus said, taking the lantern. "Ah, your Lordship. I will return with a report."

  At any rate, I hope to return.

  "With your permission, Lord Varus," Pandareus said, "I'll accompany you."

  "Yes," Varus said. "That might be helpful, Teacher."

  They started down into the crypt side by side. Varus held the lantern out in front of them.

  If it hadn't been for the Sibyl's roundabout direction, Varus would have been pleased and excited to enter a Serapeum. It was a link to Carce's past; not so ancient as the crypt in which the Sibylline Books were stored, but old and part of a mystery cult besides.

  The Sibyl had sent him here, however. Therefore, more was involved than viewing the decoration and appointments of a secret chapel.

  "I doubt," said Pandareus in a mild, musing tone, "that we will encounter Apis in the form of an angry bull. Though I'll admit that I'm less confident than I once was at my ability to predict events."

  "I was thinking more along the lines of the goddess Isis loosing cobras on us," Varus said. "Unlikely, but less unlikely than other things that have occurred recently. Or that I imagined happened."

  They reached the bottom of the stairs: only twelve steps down. It had looked deeper. There was no door at the base of the staircase, but the archway there was too narrow for more than one person to pass at a time.

  Varus, holding the lantern high, stepped into what was clearly an anteroom. There was a doorway in the opposite wall with a niche on either side. To the left was a statuette of a ma
le figure with a bull's head; on the right stood a female figure with a cow's head and a crescent moon rocking between her horns.

  "If this were an Egyptian temple," Pandareus said, looking past Varus' shoulder, "I would describe them as Apis and Isis. The Ptolemies were eclectic when they created the cult, however, and they may have made other choices."

  He sighed. "My friend Priscus-" Senator Marcus Atilius Priscus "-would know that sort of thing without having to look it up, but I didn't think it would be right to involve him in this matter."

  "If the question becomes important," Varus said, "we can answer it at leisure when we return. Unless we're arrested for some political crime, as you suggest."

  Varus would have said he was the least political of men, unless that honor was due his father. Yet here they both were, invading the house of another senator under consular authority, an action that could easily be described as rebellion or insult to the Emperor as head of state.

  "I don't think Tardus will be reporting this intrusion to the authorities," Varus said.

  "Probably true," Pandareus said. "In that case, we have only a monster capable of wrecking a city to worry about."

  Varus chuckled.

  They entered the second chamber, twice the size of the first. Stone benches were built into three walls, intended for diners who were sitting upright instead of reclining as was the custom for men in Carce. Servants would set tables of food and wine in the hollow within the three benches.

  In place of a fourth wall, passages to either side flanked an alabaster slab carved in relief. Varus raised the lantern again to view the carving, a man with a full beard seated in a high-backed chair and glaring outward.

  "Sarapis joining his worshippers for the sacred meal," Pandareus said. Then, looking upward, "The frieze is interesting."

  Varus moved the lantern. The reliefs were of very high quality: a bearded man flanked by a youth and a young woman in flowing robes; in the next panel, the youth thrusting back the woman who, bare-breasted, was trying to pull him onto a couch; in the last- "This is Hippolytus and Phaedra," Varus said aloud. "Hippolytus cursed by his father Theseus, who believed his wife's false claim that her stepson had raped her."

  "Yes," said Pandareus. "Those three, and the monster which executed Theseus' curse."

  On the third panel, a tentacled, many-legged monster climbed out of the sea in the background. Hippolytus' chariot raced through brush, dragging behind it the youth whose reins remained wrapped around his wrists when he was thrown out.

  "Do you suppose this is what we were meant to see?" Varus said.

  Pandareus shrugged. "There must be another room," he said.

  They walked to right and left of the carving of Serapis. On the other side, Varus found a tunnel stretching farther into the distance than his lantern could even hint. "This seems to slope downward," he said, turning toward Pandareus.

  The teacher was not there. Varus was alone in a tunnel. Behind him was a faint rectangular glow, the sort of light that he might have seen creeping past the edges of the slab from the trap door in the distant gazebo.

  Varus took a deep breath, then walked forward at the measured pace of a philosopher and a citizen of Carce. He wondered what he would find at the other end of the tunnel, but it was pointless to speculate. If Typhon waited for him, so be it.

  The floor of the chapel had been of simple mosaic design, black frames each crossed by an internal X, on a white ground. Now Varus was walking on seamless sandstone: the tunnel had been drilled through living rock.

  There was something ahead: at first just a texture on the sidewalls. Then, as Varus proceeded with the lantern, he saw that the walls had been cut back at knee height to make shelves. On them were terracotta urns, similar to ordinary wine jars. Instead of ordinary stoppers, these jars were closed with the stylized heads of birds with long curved beaks.

  One of the jars had fallen and shattered some distance down the long corridor. Varus paused and knelt to bring the lantern closer: there would be nothing at the other end of this passage that wouldn't wait for him to arrive. Given that it might be his goal might be death, he wasn't going to have the regret that he'd hastened past his last opportunity for learning.

  He smiled, but he meant it. Pandareus would understand; and perhaps Corylus would as well.

  The jar had enclosed the corpse of a bird. It had been mummified-the smell of natron and cedar resin was noticeable even after what might have been ages-but the skull was bare beneath rotted linen wrappings.

  It had been an ibis. There were thousands or tens of thousands of ibises in this necropolis.

  Varus rose to his feet and walked on. He had to restrain himself from counting paces under his breath. He wasn't sure that he was really moving physically anyway. It would be unworthy of a philosopher to carry out a meaningless ritual to trick his mind into the belief that he was imposing control over his immediate surroundings.

  I think I see light. But Varus knew that he could see flashes even when his eyes were closed; and he had to admit that his present state of mind wasn't wholly that of a dispassionate philosopher.

  He wondered if Socrates had really been that calm when he prepared to drink the poison. Plato had not been a disinterested witness, now that Varus thought about it; given that Plato's stature as a teacher was directly dependent on the stature of the master whom he portrayed as showing godlike wisdom and fortitude.

  Varus chuckled. He would have described himself as an Epicurean; but perhaps the teachings of Diogenes the Cynic better suited his present mental state.

  "Greetings, Lord Varus," called the man standing at the end of the corridor. The pool of light surrounding him did not come from any source Varus could see. "I am Menre."

  Varus stepped to within arm's length of the stranger who wore a woolen tunic, a semicircular cloak that hung to his waist, and a low-crowned, flat-brimmed leather hat. He would have passed for an ordinary traveller anywhere in Greece or the southern portions of Italy.

  "Sir, you're Menre the Egyptian?" Varus said in puzzlement. The stranger-Menre-held a bulky papyrus scroll in his left hand.

  Menre laughed. "Sarapis is more Greek than Egyptian," he said, "and perhaps the same is true of me. Regardless, the chapel was a useful connection between you and the place I am."

  Varus found his lips dry; he licked them. He said, "Sir, I would have expected you to visit my teacher Pandareus, as you have in the past. Rather than me."

  Menre looked him up and down as though he were a slave-or a couch-he was considering buying. Smiling faintly, he said, "Pandareus is a great scholar, worthy of a place in any learned academy. But he is not a magician, so this-"

  He offered the scroll in his left hand.

  "-would be of no use to him or to the world."

  Varus took the scroll. He started to fumble with it, then set the lantern on the floor so that he had both hands free. There was as much light as there would be outside at midday in Carce, even if he couldn't tell where it was coming from.

  He unrolled a few pages of the book; Menre watched him, continuing to smile. The text was in pictographs; chapters were headed-he unrolled more of the scroll to be sure-by paintings in the Egyptian style, full frontal or full profile; gods of terrible aspect confronted humans.

  Still holding the book open, Varus met the other man's eyes. "Sir," he said, "this is written in Egyptian holy symbols. I can't read it."

  "Can you not, Magician?" Menre said. To Varus, his words were an eerie echo of those the Sybil sometimes directed at him. "Try."

  Scowling, Varus looked down at the page, as meaningless to him as bird tracks in the dust. He said, "All hail to Ra, the Sun, as he rises in the eastern quadrant of heaven!" He stopped, amazed.

  "You will need the book," Menre said, smiling more broadly. "Give my regards to your teacher, whose scholarship I respect."

  The light began to fade; Menre faded with it, as though he had been only a mirage. Just before he vanished completely, his faint voice adde
d, "You will need more than the book, Lord Varus. Perhaps more than your world holds. Good luck to you, but I am not hopeful."

  Varus swallowed. For a moment, his surroundings seemed as dark as the tomb; then his eyes adjusted to the oil flame wavering in the lantern which sat on the ground beside him. He picked it up again. The large scroll had vanished, as though it never was.

  He and Pandareus were in the service area of the chapel. Food couldn't be prepared here, but prepared dishes would be brought in ahead of time and then served in sequence to the diners.

  "Lord Varus?" Pandareus said. "Are you all right?"

  "I-" Varus said. He rubbed his eyes with the back of his free hand. "Did I disappear, Master?"

  "No," said Pandareus, "but you stopped where you were and put the lantern down. You didn't appear to hear me when I spoke to you."

  "Ah," said Varus. "Was I, that is, was this for long?"

  "Not long," said Pandareus. "Not much longer than it took you to pick up the lantern again. Did something happen to you?"

  "We may as well go back," Varus said, turning. He felt queasy, as though he had grasped for a handhold while falling and felt his fingers slip off it. All that remained now was to hit the ground. "I thought I met Menre and that he gave me a book that he said I would need. That we would need. But I don't have it now."

  "Can you remember any of it?" Pandareus said, leading through the central room of the chapel. The light from above was enough for him to avoid the benches now that they had been underground for long enough.

  "I didn't read it," Varus said, feeling an edge of irritation. "I just glanced at the opening columns. And even if I had-"

  Suddenly, unbidden, the phrase, "Let not the Destroyer be allowed to prevail over him!" leaped into his mind. He shouted the words aloud.

  Pandareus glanced back at him and nodded in satisfaction. "It appears to me, Lord Varus," he said, "that you have what we need. What all the world needs."

 

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