The little party rattled off to the south, following a rutted track.
“Look around.” Qirum waved at the fields, the crops that grew around abandoned Northlander flood mounds. “Only months since we first set foot here. Already this empty, barren land is bearing fruit.”
“Stop being so provocative,” said Milaqa. “The land was neither empty nor barren before you came. And slow down. I think the Annid might throw up.”
Qirum laughed. But he dragged at the stallions’ harness until the chariot slowed a little. “But still, see how much we’ve done. We have brought wheat and barley, as well as sheep and goats and cattle. The crops are not native to this land, and the colder air, the heavier soils, inhibit their growth. But we have been joined by others from the Continent, from Gaira and beyond, who have brought the crops they grow there. Lentils. Peas. Beans. Flax. Poppies. Even the poorer soils can be made to bear a crop, millet or rye if you handle them right …”
“Farmers from Gaira, here?”
“Most of those you will see are booty people, brought over after we landed. I don’t know where half of them came from originally. Probably they don’t either by now! But as news of my new kingdom has spread through the Continent people have flocked here of their own accord—strong, ambitious people eager to carve their names in the blank face of this empty country. You should thank me. These nestspills from the sunless summers might have come here anyway. At least by coming to me they have a choice other than raiding.
“And there are Northlanders here, Milaqa. Your own people, able to see at last what madness it is to live the way you do. Look around; you will probably recognize some of our old drinking partners from those long nights in the Scambles taverns!”
For all his boasting, it did not take long before they approached the center of his new realm. Another, stouter wall surrounded tightly packed fields, and a mound rose up over the flat horizon, an old flood mound now crested by a ring of stone wall. Milaqa recognized the plan of the place. The mound was now Qirum’s citadel, the heart of his new walled town, like the Pergamos at the heart of long-ruined Troy, like the citadel of the Hatti kings at Hattusa.
In the center of Northland, this was a city. This was New Troy.
51
The outer wall was earth topped with heaped stones, fronted by a ditch with sharpened stakes stuck in the ground. The only crossings were wooden bridges over the ditch, leading to gates manned by more soldiers.
Once they were within the wall they passed people working the fields, while others looked on from houses, some substantial with turf walls and thatch roofs, others just lean-tos. They all looked exhausted. And all stepped aside when the King passed.
Qirum, evidently proud of his city, boasted of its features. “Now we are on my own estate. You see, within the ring of this outer wall, I am creating factories to make weapons to fight war, and precious goods to buy peace. The other estates are mostly given over to farming. Each of my basileis, my senior generals, Protis and the Spider, has been granted extensive estates, as have some of the senior men under them. I have borrowed many ideas from Protis, who is from Sparta. All the powerful Spartans own land, you know, and the people who work on it. But in return all male Spartans are expected to serve in the army. They have assemblies where the citizen-warriors can make their views known to the King. And the King organizes the education of the boys centrally, so they are all raised as warriors, as citizens. It is a healthy and productive system.”
Milaqa said, “So you are surrounding yourself with other powerful men, many of whom are no doubt every bit as ambitious and energetic as you. Isn’t that dangerous?”
He winked at her again. “I make sure to keep a healthy rivalry bubbling. Let them simmer with resentment. Let them fight each other! That way no one of them can gather the strength to challenge me.”
They came to the inner stone wall around the citadel, where they clambered down from the chariot and the horses. More guards, heavily armored and wearing plumed boar-tusk helmets, came out to meet Qirum.
Noli stepped up to the wall itself and stroked its surface. It was two or three times her height, and roughly finished. “This is facing stone from the Wall,” she said. “Our Wall. There have been raids—I never understood why they needed such stone. Now I know. And for this folly they risk compromising the integrity of the Wall itself, which keeps the sea from overwhelming us all.” She turned to Teel. “Are we among the mad, Annid?”
“Have patience,” Teel counseled.
The soldiers opened a tall wooden gate, and Qirum led the party into the citadel. Paved steps cut into the mound led up to the ornate door of the King’s house. This was a square construction with a flat roof, of the kind Milaqa recognized from her travels in the east, but it was much cruder than those ancient palaces, a wooden frame clad with stone, and roofed over by long timbers and a thatch of river reeds. Servants or slaves, many of them women younger than Milaqa, mostly barefoot, came running out. Bearing towels, jugs of hot water, trays of fruit, they fawned around Qirum and his guests. None of the servants would look Milaqa in the eye. She wondered how many of them were Northlanders.
Qirum led them into the single large room that dominated the house. There were rugs and mats thrown over the floor, and a clutter of couches, cushions and low tables. Guards stood in the corners with hands on scabbarded swords, watching the newcomers. Cut into one wall was a kind of shrine, shelves with little statuettes of gods; priests intoned steadily, their backs to the visitors. Qirum crossed the room to speak to the priests.
The Northlanders stood together in the middle of the room, uncertain, ill at ease.
Milaqa wandered over to the single south-facing window that looked out over the rest of the citadel. Standing by the window, breathing air laden with smoke and the stink of cattle dung, she saw this place through the eyes of Qirum, saw it as it might become. This prospect would one day look out on a palace complex of workshops, kitchens and granaries, and beyond a crowded city bustling with people. But for now the new fields and farms were no more than a scratch on the ancient ground of Northland, and in the undeveloped lands beyond she saw water spreading from clogged weirs, a field flooded by a collapsed dyke.
Qirum returned to the Northlanders. “I apologize for keeping you. I have always believed in keeping the gods happy first and foremost.”
Noli asked, “To whom do your priests pray?”
“To the Storm God who sends us to war—he is represented by the bull. And to the god we Trojans know as Iyarri, and the Greeks call Apollo. In one of his aspects, Smintheus, he is the god of plagues, and of mice.”
“You pray to be saved from plagues?”
“We have had a number of problems during our first summer in this country. A number of deaths. But thankfully now—”
“I can see why.” Noli pointed grandly out of the window. “You let the weirs clog, the dykes crumble. Because of your brutish ignorance the land is returning to the marsh from which my ancestors saved it, and from such marshes rise the diseases that deservedly afflict you. You can tell that traitor Bren, if he is in this pile somewhere, that I hope the plagues carry him off too, if they haven’t already.”
“I will take your views into consideration,” he said with dry humor. “In the meantime you are my guests—”
“I intend to spend as little time here as I can, Trojan,” Noli snapped. “Here I am, here we are, as you requested. Let us hear whatever it is you have to say.”
Milaqa saw anger behind Qirum’s facade of good humor. Milaqa suspected he wanted to lavish hospitality on them, to put on a show—to demonstrate he was a king. Noli wasn’t playing the game. Qirum said carefully, “Despite your curtness, madam, I guarantee your safety here. And I promise you safe passage back to Etxelur, bearing news of this meeting. I hope you appreciate that much.”
“We do,” Deri said gruffly.
“Then let’s get on, if you’re in such a rush.” He turned to Erishum. “Bring the tablets.”
The man left the room, and in a moment returned with two clay tablets, each small enough to hold in the hand. Erishum handed them to Noli, who glanced over them and passed them in turn to Milaqa. “Can you read these?”
The tablets were marked with the angular writing used by the Hatti and their allies and satellites. “With time—”
“Let me save you the effort, Milaqa,” Qirum said evenly. “This is our custom. In times gone by a war could be settled by sending out a single champion from one side to challenge a man from the other. You would try to resolve it that way, you see, before committing men in their hundreds to die. Well—perhaps it will still come to that. But in these more civilized times we go one step further, and first send out words to be our champions.”
The talk of war chilled the room. But Noli kept her composure. “Words? These little blocks of clay?”
“The block in your left hand, Milaqa, is a tablet of peace. The one in your right, a tablet of war.”
“Peace? On what terms?”
“There will be no more Northland,” Qirum said simply. “Well, this is already true. All of Northland is now the Kingdom of New Troy—my kingdom. Mine to use as I please. In fact I have already parceled up much of it; I will show you the maps, if you like. All that remains is to mark the boundaries. But you of Etxelur can live in peace. Your Annid of Annids will serve as one of my basileis if she likes, but I, and my heirs, will remain the overking. You can even keep your Wall; you can live as you like, in the strip of land bordering it. After all there are few enough of you. The tribute I will exact will be modest. Food, wealth, a levy of soldiers—”
“A tribute that will pay for what, exactly?”
“For protection,” he said smoothly.
Noli smiled thinly. “Let me be clear. Perhaps you should translate for me, Milaqa, to be sure he understands. This is what you call a settlement. This is our reward for peace.”
“It is.”
“And you see it as just? Very well. And the terms of your tablet of war—”
“When your resistance is crushed, you, your children, and your grandchildren unto eternity, will work on the farms of my estate. The Spartans have this system. They call the owned ones helots.” He said this as if imparting an interesting fact, rather than making brutal threats. Not for the first time Milaqa wondered how much she really understood this man.
Noli was expressionless. “And what of the canals, the dykes—what of the Wall? What will become of the works of Northland?”
He laughed. “Oh, I care nothing for your Wall! Let it fall or stand, I don’t care. No, wait—I always rather liked those big stone heads that adorn it. What was the name of your Jaguar-girl sculptor, Milaqa? Perhaps I will have her chip off the old faces and replace them with my own handsome smile—looking down on Northland, forever!”
Noli seemed to consider. Then she took back the tablets from Milaqa and raised them both, as if she was going to smash them to the floor.
“Annid—wait.” Teel took her arm, and guided her a few paces away. Deri joined them, and Milaqa. They spoke softly, but Milaqa was sure that there were ears to hear every word. Teel said, “We must consider his offer.”
“What offer? To be a vassal or a slave?”
“You see how strong he is already. At least we can buy time, find ways to deal with this threat—”
“No,” Deri said sternly. “This place, this ‘kingdom’ of warriors and farmers, is like a growth in the body that kills you if you don’t cut it out.”
“Sometimes such a thing will kill you because you cut it out,” Teel replied.
Noli shook her head. “In another generation it will be impossible to shift them, and all will be lost. You heard how he spoke of the Wall. This fool understands nothing of how Northland is maintained, how we have preserved it in the hundreds of generations since the days of Ana and Prokyid. This is a day that has long been threatened. The records of the Annids show how we have kept the cattle-folk at bay, and their warriors and weapons and war making, through ingenuity and determination. But a final conflict was inevitable, I suppose. Has it fallen to our generation to face that conflict? Then face it we will. We must resist this man, this monster. And if we fail—well, at least our children would not have long to suffer servitude, for soon the sea will rise up and drown all of us, warriors, slaves and all.”
“All right,” Teel said hastily, hushing her. “Save the speeches for the Water Council. But do we have to tell him we will resist? As I said, if we can only buy some time—”
“By lying?” Noli looked at him with utter contempt. Teel rolled his eyes.
Qirum faced them, hands on hips, growing impatient. “Well?”
Noli looked down on him, stern, rather magnificent, Milaqa thought. She quietly handed the tablets back to him. “We reject your terms, Trojan. We will not rest until we have driven you from this land, and burned down this palace of shit you have built. Is that reply clear enough for you?”
Qirum was ominously still. For all his promises of safe conduct Milaqa felt their peril building with each heartbeat. At length he said, “I bring civilization to this place. Civilization, to replace your antique savagery. Do you think I grab power for its own sake? And your tone—do you Annids imagine you are superior to the cultures I represent? You may have no armies, but do you not control the water that feeds this land? Is it not just as the kings of Egypt and Hattusa control their great irrigation networks, and so control the people? Are we not images of each other?” He was smoldering now. “Do you imagine you are superior to me, woman? Do you imagine you are better?” And Milaqa knew the deepest levels of his personality were being exposed, the shameful memory of his boyhood.
“This conversation serves no purpose.” Noli turned on her heel and stalked from the room.
Qirum, furious now, lunged after her. But Milaqa grabbed his arm, despite the glares she got from Erishum and the guards. “Don’t, Qirum. She’s going to have to convince the Annids to fight you. If you send back her head in a basket you’ll make the argument for her.” She tried not to flinch from the anger that burned in his eyes.
Then he calmed, apparently through sheer effort of will. “You’re right. Of course. You always were a wise one, as well as a truth-teller. I must be patient. After all, the next time I meet that woman she will be dancing on the end of my cock.”
She pulled away from him, repelled. “Is this why we must fight, Qirum? Because yet another woman has wronged you?”
He looked her full in the face, and she felt that strange, liquid, hot-metal sensation inside. “Milaqa—come to me. Fight by my side.”
“You ask me such a thing, at a moment like this? Why?”
“Because we must stand together, the likes of you and me. We who are outside. We who have no place. We have more in common with each other than with those who”—he waved a hand at the others—“weigh us down.”
“You’d have me fight my people, my family?”
He smiled. “I listened to you complain about them long enough in the Wall taverns.”
“Perhaps. But I could not betray them.”
“No.” He sighed. “I suppose I would expect nothing less. Ah, Milaqa—even though the world has separated us, I pledge that I will never harm you.”
Teel plucked at her sleeve. “We must go. I think Noli is out of the building already. It would not do to become separated.”
Milaqa let herself be led away. Qirum stood alone, briefly, in this great room, in his palace of wood and mud and stone. He smiled at her, then turned away.
52
The Second Year After the Fire Mountain:
Late Autumn
Mi came running into the hearthspace of My Sun, her big Kirike’s Land bow slung over her shoulder. She was breathing hard, sweating despite the chill of the day. “They are coming,” she said. “The Trojans! They are coming!”
Hadhe and Vala were sitting with the other women at the open-air fire in the hearthspace. They were working on the fruits of
the autumn forests: acorns from the oaks being readied for the winter storage pit, and leaves, bark, flowers from the horse chestnuts, all of which could be used in cooking and in medicine.
For a heartbeat nobody moved. Somehow Hadhe couldn’t hear what Mi was saying, couldn’t take it in. Here was her village, her home, the neat houses around the central hearthplace, the big communal house standing proud on its flood mound, the hopeful symbols carved by Caxa into the high hillside that had become so popular that everybody called this place “My Sun” now, rather than its old name of Sunflower. Even the bare earth of the new defensive rampart they had had to build did not spoil the beauty of the prospect. She took a deep breath, of air that was tinged with the smoke of the quietly crackling fire, and with a deeper, burning scent of the turning leaves. And the child inside her, five months into its term, turned in its contented sleep.
She looked at Mi, this urgent fourteen-year-old with her bad news. It had been five months since the Trojans had landed, three since Noli’s showdown with Qirum. The summer was long gone, the season when the soldiers liked to fight. They were safe, for this year at least. Weren’t they?
“I saw purple hairstreaks today,” she said.
“What?” Mi snapped. “What?”
“Near the oaks, when we were gathering the acorns. What pretty butterflies they are. The sun was shining right through their wings. It’s been a funny year for butterflies and moths, but—”
“Butterflies? Didn’t you hear what I said?”
Vala got up and put an arm around her daughter’s shoulder. “Mi? Are you sure?”
Mi pointed to the south, in the direction of New Troy. “I saw their fires, mother. Smoke. I crept closer.”
“That was foolish—”
“I took care!” Mi snapped, defiant. “They would not see me! But I saw them. Men. Horses. Chariots. Weapons everywhere.”
Bronze Summer : The Northland Trilogy (9781101615416) Page 30