by Mary Reed
“I know you don’t believe me, but the situation was different after I started to work at the palace. I thought Anatolius might see me in a better light. A lady-in-waiting has some dignity. Only…only…” She buried her face in her hands.
“Only what, Kuria?” John asked.
“He was having an affair with Vesta!” She raised her face from her hands and her eyes were full of anger. “The lying bitch was off to his house at all hours, and she pretended to be my friend. It all came out when I showed her the poem he gave me. She was horrified about his gift to me. She blurted out he was hers or words to the effect. Right away she wished she hadn’t, but it was too late. I started thinking about her comings and goings. It was clear enough what she was up to.”
“When you were attacked, you were on your way to visit Anatolius, to see if you could rekindle the old feelings you imagine he held for you,” John suggested.
“Yes. And now I’m in no condition to do so.”
John recalled how he had taken her for a helpless, befuddled young girl after their first meeting in the gardens.
He had been badly mistaken.
“Did you tell Vesta about your hopes?”
“Certainly not. I let her think it was over between Anatolius and myself years ago.”
Isis snorted with a sound more appropriate to a madam than the head of a refuge. “Girls are all so silly. I’m glad to be out of the business!”
“Kuria,” John continued. “Isis told me you attacked a rival not long before you left here, quarreling over a favorite patron. Was it Anatolius?”
Kuria glowered at John but said nothing.
“You placed the herbs in Vesta’s room and arranged for the note to be sent to the City Prefect, didn’t you, Kuria? Your room must have been near hers, since all the ladies-in-waiting live in the same wing. “
“It served her right, Lord Chamberlain! I almost put it off too long. Right after I got back from the gardens with the herbs I found my door nailed shut. Vesta was naive. After I convinced her I no longer had any interest in Anatolius she started extolling his virtues and confiding how she would soon be together with him. It would be a great romance, just like Joannina and Anastasius.”
Kuria’s scratched and bruised face twisted into a sneer. “The bitch wanted to be just like her mistress. Like a trained dog, she was. Didn’t you notice how she tried to dress like Joannina and wore her hair like her? She wanted her own aristocrat too. Wanted a romance that everyone at court would frown on, just to make it more exciting. She tried to steal my Anatolius from me.”
“Ha!” remarked Isis. “You flatter yourself, thinking Anatolius belonged to you!”
“He would have come back to me! He didn’t love Vesta. It’s easy to feel you’re fond of someone in a beautiful room with a soft bed and luxurious furniture, but to feel you love someone on a cold, bare slab like this…” She slapped the utilitarian shelf on which she was seated.
“And you think Vesta a romantic,” sniffed Isis.
“As a matter of fact,” John said, “Anatolius and Vesta were not having an affair. He was at his wit’s end trying to avoid the girl. He’s old enough to be her father, or yours for that matter, Kuria.”
Kuria’s looked at John hopefully. “Are you sure they—”
“It doesn’t appear to concern you that your jealousy placed Vesta in danger,” John said in a cold voice, “but doesn’t it bother you that you’ve put Anatolius in danger?”
Kuria’s face clouded. “But why?”
“Have you forgotten what that poem says about Theodora? The emperor is convinced Anatolius plotted to kill Theodora with your assistance.”
Isis chuckled grimly. “If everyone who pointed out Theodora was a slut was plotting against her…” She broke off abruptly and stared at John. “That means the emperor will have his men looking for Kuria.”
Chapter Sixty-one
There was as yet no sign of dawn when John emerged from Isis’ refuge and set out at a trot for the palace. The black shapes of ox-drawn carts making night deliveries materialized from the darkness and creaked past. A dog barked frantically as he went by its resting place, a niche sheltering a statue of a once illustrious general.
John had lost all sense of time. He was afraid to look at the sky for fear he would see it brightening.
But even as he raced to save Anatolius, his thoughts kept turning toward Cornelia.
What had happened to her?
Where was she?
He imagined her imprisoned somewhere, having been abducted. Terrified, perhaps injured.
He recalled his own abduction, lying in the dark in the carriage, not knowing its destination, expecting only that the trip would end in his death.
What might Cornelia be feeling right now. Or worse yet…
No, he forced his thoughts away from the idea. And yet he had seen so much violent death he could entirely prevent unbearable images from forming in his mind.
But what would be gained by harming Cornelia? If someone wanted to use her to protect themselves against John’s investigation why had he heard nothing?
He realized he could not afford to let his mind wander away from the most pressing problem—the imminent danger to Anatolius.
Cornelia might be in just as much danger.
The hours were flying by.
He tried to convince himself Cornelia’s disappearance must be connected to his investigation, that continuing his pursuit of Theodora’s murderer, clearing Anatolius of wrongdoing would in the end serve Cornelia.
He must go directly to Justinian. The emperor must be made to believe Kuria’s explanation for the incriminating herbs she had left in Vesta’s room. Vesta, whose frequent visits linked her to Anatolius, who was linked to his client the Cappadocian and the Cappadocian’s ally, Germanus. The men arguably had reason to want Theodora dead, but neither had access to the empress. Remove Vesta and the whole imagined plot fell apart. And besides, Vesta wanted Theodora to live, so that her mistress Joannina could marry Anastasius.
It was obvious.
Provided one believed Kuria.
Provided the emperor would pay attention to her. John pictured the pathetic girl on her hard bed in the refuge’s narrow cell, her meager half-finished meal on the earthenware plate. Why would the emperor pay attention to her?
Because she had been a protegée of Theodora. A favorite. Surely he would pay attention, or at least delay any action against Anatolius until he heard the girl’s story. He would feel he owed as much to his late wife.
Isis was right now helping her get clean and chastely outfitted, readying the wretched girl for the imperial audience John hoped to arrange.
But if Justinian believed Kuria and allowed Anatolius to go free, where would the emperor turn his ire next?
Many in the city held a grudge against Theodora. More than half the court might imagine advancement for themselves in her absence. Everyone John spoke with pointed him toward one of their enemies, as if their word would be sufficient to dispose of them.
Kuria had been more cunning than the aristocrats, for only she had supported her self-serving accusation through physical evidence: herbs which could not lie about their purpose.
Objects were more trustworthy than people. They did not seek to mislead, but neither did they readily offer up what they knew.
If dawn was breaking it was still concealed beyond the black bulk of the palace as John arrived back. The reception hall where he had met Justinian was vacant except for smoky phantoms created by smoldering lamps.
“He did not ask for guards to be summoned to accompany him yet he’s walking on the grounds, Lord Chamberlain,” said the silentiary on duty. “It makes it very difficult to ensure his protection.”
Yes, John thought, it would also be difficult not to be able to slee
p at your post for fear the emperor might suddenly appear and catch you at it.
Where would Justinian be?
There was nowhere in the palace the emperor’s nocturnal journeys did not take him. On the night John had gone to the mithraeum he had encountered Justinian in the kitchens. Surely, however, one place he would never miss visiting was the room where Theodora had died.
The room was empty.
John stepped inside. So deep was it in the interior of the palace, Justinian had not bothered to keep a guard on the door. Compared to the riches all around there was hardly anything of value here. The dismantled bed sat in the corner, as he had last seen it, beside the marble-topped table and wooden chest. The only light was from a wall lamp several paces down the corridor.
He turned slowly to survey the room.
With a start he noticed two men staring at him with shining eyes.
No, it was only the icon depicting the healing saints.
The air smelled sweet, as if someone had been burning incense.
He completed his survey. As before, the room did not lie to him, but neither did it tell him anything.
Theodora had not left its confines for weeks. She could only have been killed by one who had entered here, as John had, but unlike this night, the room had been closely guarded and few had gained admittance.
John had hoped to explain to Justinian that Vesta, who had served Theodora, had not, as the emperor had apparently convinced himself, murdered her at the behest of Anatolius, on behalf of Germanus and the Cappadocian. And, John reminded himself, Felix, for hadn’t he been visiting Germanus too? Nor had the murderer been the lady-in-waiting Kuria, whose word—if Justinian accepted it—would exonerate Vesta and Anatolius.
Very well. Who had entry to this small room? The two ladies-in-waiting had spent a great deal of time with Theodora. Gaius visited often, but now he was dead he could not satisfy Justinian’s wrath even if John were inclined to blacken his friend’s memory.
He looked at the grim-faced holy men depicted in the gilded icon. They had seen the murderer.
Christians believed that saints interceded in earthly affairs, and that their power was more concentrated in the vicinity of holy icons, relics, and the like.
But Cosmas and Damian did not seem inclined to aid a Mithran Lord Chamberlain.
John turned his gaze elsewhere.
Spartan as the room was compared to most of the palace, it was luxurious compared to the cell in which he had interviewed Kuria. Theodora’s deathbed had been soft.
There came to John’s mind an image of the plate in Kuria’s cell. The half-eaten bread, the olive pits.
He opened the inlaid wooden chest, crouched down, and pushed aside bottles and pots until he came to the carefully wrapped bundle he sought. Cushioned inside the fabric was the lidded ceramic jar from the imperial kitchens he had seen when he first examined the contents of the chest at the beginning of his investigations. An image of an olive tree was embossed in the clay.
There was a footstep behind him.
“Have you stooped to robbing the dead, Lord Chamberlain?”
John turned.
In the half light, the emperor’s scarlet boots looked the color of blood.
Chapter Sixty-two
“You may stand, Lord Chamberlain,” said the emperor. “We are all equal in the presence of death.”
John got to his feet.
Justinian gave a sardonic smile. His gaze fell to the jar in John’s hands. “You would make a poor thief. The shelves of the kitchens are lined with such jars. Once their contents are gone, they are worthless clay. Like our own flesh.”
Though the words were spoken lightly, John detected a tightening around the emperor’s eyes.
“Excellency, I wish to speak about Anatolius.”
Justinian gave no indication he had heard. He looked around the room. “The plasterers will arrive soon,” he said quietly. “This is the last opportunity I or anyone else will have to see this accursed place before it is sealed off forever. The dust of years will fall silently where my dear wife suffered and died, covering everything with a soft mantle of memory. A strange thing to contemplate, is it not?”
A strange time to engage in poetical ruminations was John’s opinion. “I must respectfully request Narses be instructed to allow Anatolius to leave the Great Church in safety. I have evidence Anatolius was not involved in the empress’ death.”
Justinian leveled an expressionless gaze on John. “Proceed.”
John recounted Kuria’s confession.
Justinian paced as he listened. Then he closed his eyes briefly. “Kuria. Yes. My dear Theodora’s favorite lady-in-waiting, one she trusted. She raised her up from a terrible life.”
“The empress could not have misjudged the girl’s character,” John suggested.
The emperor patted the frame of the bed. “I agree. But who then? Who was the culprit?” He paused. “That murderous drunkard Gaius. Of course! He killed himself, a sure admission of guilt. Perhaps he realized your long friendship would not protect him?”
“It is my belief his death was a mistake while he was intoxicated,” John replied.
“It was made plain to Gaius that retaining his head depended upon his remaining in a fit state to treat my wife.” Justinian glanced in the direction of the icon of the healing saints. “When he was elsewhere it was doubtless a different matter. On reflection, it seems obvious he made the last batch of Theodora’s painkilling medicine far too strong, fatally strong. Therefore I have decided her death was due to an overdose, brought about by the physician’s carelessness. Unfortunately the culprit is beyond justice.”
John shifted the jar he held from one hand to another. “Her death was then an accident, not murder?”
Justinian sighed and nodded. “It seems so, Lord Chamberlain.”
“Excellency,” said John, praying to Mithra his tongue would not tangle the words he had to say. “If I may give my opinion, I believe it was not an accidental overdose. Nor was it murder by an enemy’s hand.”
Justinian’s gaze had moved back to the icon. “Her agony was unimaginable, Lord Chamberlain. I saw it all, shared it all. I never left her side. I fed her personally as long as she could take nourishment, helped her drink her medicine. Toward the end she took nothing but painkilling potions. By then they had lost their effect. It was torture, Lord Chamberlain.”
“It is true, excellency, you attended the empress constantly. Of all those I have spoken to in the course of my investigations, no one spent as much time with her as you.”
The expression Justinian turned on John was so utterly devoid of emotion as to appear, under the circumstances, totally inhuman. “Explain yourself, Lord Chamberlain.”
John raised the jar slightly. “Olives. This jar contained olives. Who would eat olives in the presence of the empress, who could not even eat the fruit she was sent? Surely you would never have done so.”
“One of the attendants,” Justinian replied.
“They would not bring a jar of olives into the sickroom. This jar is from the kitchens. I know you are familiar with the kitchens. I saw you there one night not long ago.”
Justinian said nothing.
“Do you require me to be more specific?” John asked, asking Mithra to protect him.
Justinian’s face remained a rigid mask. “I have asked too much of you, Lord Chamberlain. I will summon you later when you are less tired. You may go.”
John remained where he was. He needed to finish this, now. He could not wait any longer to find Cornelia, no matter how much he might anger the emperor.
And he was about to anger him.
“Excellency, you had the most and the easiest access to the empress,” he said. “You also had the strongest motive for hastening her death. The motive of merc
y. You just pointed out she was being tortured. As I said, her death was neither an accidental overdose nor murder by the hand of an enemy.”
There came to him an image of the wall painting at Antonina’s house, the copy of the Ravenna mosaic, the empress holding the chalice.
“A cup of sorrow for one may be a cup of blessing for another,” he added.
Justinian’s eyes blazed as if they opened onto the pits of hell. “I should have your throat cut and your body entombed in this room. Explain yourself before I order it.”
“Gaius kept increasing the amount of the empress’ painkilling medicine,” John replied. “Toward the end it ceased to help. There was no escape from her torture. The more painkiller the empress was given the more her pain increased. How could that be? Because after it became apparent it was not possible to relieve her agony, you were no longer giving her the proper amount.”
Justinian remained silent.
“Instead you were pouring part of it into this jar, one you’d taken from the kitchens. Gaius had been exceedingly careful not to bring a fatal dose into the room. Nobody could possibly know that you were saving the painkiller. You wanted to make certain you accumulated enough to relieve the empress of her suffering.”
The emperor stared at him, his face unreadable as a blank sheet of parchment. Though the room was hot, John felt enveloped with cold. He shuddered.
Mithra, I am about to be condemned to death. Guard my family, he prayed.
The emperor’s voice issued in a faint draught from all but motionless lips. “A pretty explanation indeed, Lord Chamberlain. Now explain why I would order you to find a murderer if the murderer were myself?”
Why? To hide his actions? Had he wanted John to present him with a scapegoat? Or because he had been deranged and had not, until now or some time after the act, admitted to himself he had taken his wife’s life? Had he wanted John to convince him that someone else had murdered Theodora?
“I did not say you were a murderer, excellency.”
“Then…?” Justinian pressed.