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Byzantium - A Novel

Page 6

by Michael Ennis


  ‘Haraldr.’

  Haraldr started and turned. He was relieved to see Jarl Rognvald.

  The Jarl looked out over the black-onyx surface of the Dnieper for several minutes. He knew that there was little time to say what he must. ‘Haraldr, you know I have never lost my faith in the old gods.’ Haraldr nodded. ‘That does not mean that I do not believe in Kristr. I think that all the gods exist, and the only difference between them is the gifts they present to the men they favour. Now this Kristr, grant you, is probably the greater god. He is a builder. In Norway He has built roads and bridges for his priests, and a kirke in every town. You can also see what Kristr has enabled Yaroslav, no very great man, to do in Kiev. And of course Kristr has helped the Griks build Miklagardr. By that measure alone Kristr’s power is superior to any other. But sometimes I think that Kristr loves buildings more than He does men.’

  Jarl Rognvald theatrically spread his hands out over the water. ‘Odin,’ he said expansively, ‘is the more generous god. The tale is told that Kristr hung from a cross for one day, in order to show men the way to Paradise. But Odin hung himself upside down from the rootless tree for nine days, waiting to snatch the mead of poetry from the depths of the Underworld. He has shared that drink with men, with those who dare to accept his gift.’ Jarl Rognvald looked intently at Haraldr, his eyes glaring in the blackness like winter ice. ‘That verse you recited on our last night in Kiev ... so sharp and true, and it came as quick as a thunderbolt. It is a madness, a madness given by Odin. Just like the Battle-Rage.’

  Haraldr said nothing, his thoughts smothered in fear. He had witnessed the Battle-Rage of the Berserks at Stiklestad: the Hound, the sucking nose, the red eyes. He had even worn the skin armour told of in all the tales. Yes, Haraldr reminded himself, the Rage is more than a pagan fable. It exists. And it is indeed a madness.

  ‘The other night in Kiev I watched you. Something held you back from striking Hakon, which took a greater valour than foolishly spilling the wine-bag courage in your veins. Perhaps even Odin himself held your arm. Well, I know it was not my hand. I think the wounds of Stiklestad have finally healed. I think that you are ready to accept a second gift from Odin, the gift of the Battle-Rage.’

  ‘You were with me in my last battle, Jarl.’ Haraldr’s tone was self-accusatory. ‘Would you want me beside you in your next?’

  ‘I could wish for no better comrade. Haven’t I taught you all I know?’

  Indeed, the Jarl had. Endless hours of drills with sword, axe and spear, and swimming and wrestling and riding as well. If kingdoms were won in mock combats, Haraldr would own more subjects than the Greek Emperor. But Jarl Rognvald could not teach him the inner defences a man needed in real fights. ‘Green-wood.’ A strong arm but a weak breast.

  ‘The fault isn’t with your teaching, Jarl. You know that that has meant more than anything to me. But I have a battle-fetter that no skill of yours or mine has been able to remove. If I thought Odin could release me, then I would ask his help. But I know that the strength to break that bond has to come from within. The gods cannot answer every question in a man’s mind.’

  Jarl Rognvald looked over the river for a long time. A feathery insect flew against his face and he brushed it away. Finally he spoke. ‘Haraldr, I have been a warrior all my life, and that is most of what I know of life. I am not a poet like you, and I can only tell you what I know.’ The Jarl paused and examined his hands. ‘I have been to the spirit world. Believe me. It is an inner landscape inhabited by anything the imagination can provide, and yet it is no less real for that. Each man conjures his own inner beauty, his own hidden demons, and the gods only guide him to them. Men think that when possessed by the Rage, a man becomes a beast. That is wrong. The Berserk, in fact, is a beast-slayer. He enters the spirit world and confronts the demon-beast that has held his soul captive. That beast is his fear, and when he has faced it or even slain it, when he has put his faith in his own force, his own will, then all things are possible - even miracles of the sort that are ascribed to the gods.’

  Haraldr knew then that he and the Jarl had looked out on the same desolate landscape of mind and memory, and that his own spirit-journey over that strange and terrible terrain could no longer be postponed. ‘Yes. I know that a beast waits for me there, a fear as terrible as the world-devouring dragon itself. And when I awaken in the middle of the night, I am certain that if I ever face it, I will die.’

  ‘You are ready to face it. Even the last dragon itself. You are a poet and a warrior. You showed that the other night in the Podol. And you have learned, far earlier than most men, how bitter is the outer world when a man seals off his inner world, thinking that the demons he never confronted will no longer trouble him. You know that that is no life to be clung to, not at the cost of a pure and honest soul.’

  The Jarl turned away from Haraldr and faced north, thinking of the cool emerald and azure summer in a land he would never see again. ‘Haraldr, even when you were a boy, I knew you had a mind that someday no man, perhaps even no god, could ever command. I choose to believe that Odin will guide you to your beast and help you confront it, but your own will is equally capable of leading you through the spirit world. Chosen by Odin, chosen by your own will, what does it matter? I only know that you are ready to stand before the dragon.’

  Jarl Rognvald said nothing more. He left Haraldr to his thoughts and the death-dark, murmuring Dnieper.

  Maria, Mistress of the Robes, fanned the eunuch away; her milky hand moved like a ghost through the thick steam. Despite her utilitarian-sounding title, she was the second ranking lady at court; only the Empress Zoe and the Augusta Theodora, who no longer resided in the palace precincts, were accorded more prestige. Maria studied a rivulet of perspiration as it descended from her cleavage to her navel. She pressed her finger into her navel and drew a liquid line to her glossy black pubic triangle. She pulled her legs up and thrust her arms between them, a curiously simian posture for a disturbingly beautiful woman. Her blue eyes were like tiny, miraculously illuminated grottoes in the heated mist. ‘Your husband’s brother has sent Irene away, she said languidly. Her voice chimed against the marble walls of the bath.

  The Empress Zoe towelled her moisture-beaded breasts. ‘We are already surrounded by spies.’ She sounded drowsy. ‘And our companions are no doubt happier elsewhere. But I will miss Irene. Remind me to have Symeon send her something.’

  Maria turned to the Empress, who sat next to her on the marble bench; their shoulders touched lightly. She decided not to ask the question she had considered; Zoe would speak of it when she wished. But it had been two weeks now since the Emperor had spent the night in his wife’s bedchamber. ‘Ata came to see me yesterday,’ said Maria. ‘He advises that I have neglected the amorous component of my nature.’

  Zoe’s eyes opened; they had a lovely amethyst cast. ‘Ata? Oh, yes, the palmist who came to us out of the Orient, in the company of that rather charming yet woefully disenfranchised emir.’ She paused to recall the name. ‘Salah. We haven’t seen much of Emir Salah since my husband’s brother extended the generosity of our treasury. I believe he has taken his pension and has bought some estates near Nicaea. I presume this Ata still finds our court rewarding. Darling, wasn’t the Emir one of your . . . amusements?’

  ‘I will never allow a dark-skinned creature to crawl into my bed again. He wanted to impale me from behind like one of his goats, and when I insisted otherwise, he was finished before I could draw three breaths. He then remarked that his wives were more submissive. I told him that if he was at all representative of his race, the appropriate custom would be to have one wife for twenty emirs, instead of the other way around. I could not understand what he said next. I arranged to have him ejected from my chambers as quickly as he had spewed his dubious manhood into me. The next time I saw him, I spat in his face and told him I now presumed to have given him as much pleasure as he had given me.’

  ‘Little daughter! You know I worry when you are so ... vehement.
’ The Empress spoke gaily, but her eyes winced, showing fine wrinkles at the corners.

  ‘My next lover will be entirely Western in concept. Golden skin and hair. There are some Athenian types in the Scholae who so closely resemble the ancient statues that one wonders if they were hewn from stone.’ The Scholae was the elite Imperial household cavalry.

  Zoe’s eyes had forgotten the moment of melancholy; her vividly red lips curled salaciously. ‘Darling, I can only assume that you have already been . . . reconnoitring. Can I also assume that my use of military terminology is rather apt? I have heard that you were a spectator at the pentathlon last week. I was intrigued at your sudden interest in athletic contests, until I learned that this was an intramural event for officers of the Scholae. All those oiled young gallants, and all of them lodged here in the palace precincts.’

  ‘I have found the perfect pair. Hermes and Apollo, I call them. They are beautiful, as vain as Narcissus, and insufferably arrogant. They are also inseparable, though whether it is a friendship in the style of the ancient Greeks whom they so closely resemble, I am as yet uncertain. Of course, I intend to separate them. I am dining with them both tonight.’

  ‘Little daughter! You are scandalous. But so deliciously . . . inventive. How I envy your freedom. Not from convention; may the Holy Theotokos forgive me, I have never been constrained by that. But to be able to make love and yet be untrammelled by love. How I envy you that.’

  ‘Aeifor!’ yelled Gleb. ‘The pelican roost. The fourth cataract. The most deadly.’ But the noise of Aeifor was not that of any water. It was that of a living thing, a monstrous, baleful groan, as if some titanic beast had been stirred from sleep. As the sound rose, the Rus oarsmen looked anxiously at one another. In one morning they had already passed through a lifetime of terror. The walls of giant-set stones across the river; the sucking, dizzying, mortally cold eddies; ships disappearing behind the foaming veils; and timbers showering up over the great rocks as ships exploded. The hideous flotsam, shattered strakes, cargo pods, and the limp, seemingly boneless pulp that even now chased them down the death-strewn Dnieper like shrieking ghosts. Perhaps a hundred ships and their crews had been lost already. What lay ahead?

  Aeifor first appeared as a white haze over the river. A few herons and pelicans emerged like snowflakes from the mist and flew overhead in greeting. Within minutes the current began a rapid acceleration, and then huge, jagged rocks loomed towards the starboard. The pelicans swarmed. Clouds of spray boiled into the air. Between two massive, cathedral-like rock upthrusts was a vast, swirling maw.

  The ship seemed to hit something solid. The steering oar at the stern jerked like a giant arm and swatted the steersman into the river; the hapless Rus shot past with both arms raised, almost as if he were waving goodbye, then surrendered to the Dnieper. Haraldr dashed for the wildly swiping steering oar as the ship spun and then heeled, almost capsizing. With Gleb virtually clinging to his back, he put all his weight against the bucking shaft. The oar settled and the ship fought the current, heading hard larboard.

  Over his shoulder Haraldr saw a ship disappear into Aeifor’s white shroud. The deadly mist parted for an instant, and a prow, then the entire ship, shot high above the lip of the great whirlpool, men leaping overboard, the abandoned oars flailing like the legs of a desperate centipede. Then the prow lurched down and the ship simply vanished, swallowed whole by the beast Aeifor.

  The beach that ran along the larboard bank was sandy with periodic eruptions of jutting rocks. The oarsmen rowed for their lives; the iron grip of Aeifor never slackened, as it had near the banks skirting the other cataracts. They would have to come fast against the suction to ground the ship firmly on the beach.

  Fifty ells to the shore. Haraldr braced for the shock. An oarsman lost his grip and slumped from his sea-chest. The shaft of an arrow sprouted from his neck; crimson rivulets oozed from the wound. Seconds later the ship jolted, timbers swayed, and the prow lifted. Haraldr swung his shield around from his back and jumped to firm, welcoming sand. To his right, Hakon’s ship slid onto the strand.

  The arrow blurred past Haraldr’s ear, for an instant buzzing against the terrifying groan of Aeifor. The Rus set their wall of shields in the Norse fashion, crouching and anchoring their long spears against the sand.

  A very long time seemed to pass. Haraldr feared that Aeifor only masked the shrieks of the Pechenegs; certainly they were a few dozen ells away in the thick brush, readying a massive charge. But the wall of foliage beyond the wall of shields was quiet. The leaves hung motionless; the sun glinted off them like a reflection in a stagnant pond. Jarl Rognavald knelt beside Haraldr. ‘I think we have surprised them,’ he yelled. ‘They haven’t been able to assemble for an attack.’ The Jarl located the lone Pecheneg sniper and signalled for an archer. After the Rus bowman had fired two arrows, the Jarl stood up, lifted his helm, and stroked his sweat-matted white hair. Haraldr felt as if he had miraculously escaped another humiliation, and yet he also had a strange, haunting sense of disappointment, as if he had taken the wrong road and would now miss some extraordinary marvel.

  The ships were lifted over log rollers and moved along the old portage trail with surprising speed. Hot dust clogged windpipes, and the sun glowered through a metallic haze. The afternoon wore on, an orchestration of endless, groaning motion. The portage followed a relatively cleared path through a generally wooded area; porters cut away the brush and small trees that had grown up in eight years. Occasionally runners trotted up to the Jarl with reports of men lost to Pecheneg archers, but there was no word of any concerted attacks along a line of ships that now extended down the river front for half a rowing-spell. Varangians detailed to various potential trouble spots along the line came and went in groups of fifty or a hundred, marching in smart order in their gleaming byrnnies.

  Haraldr was surprised to hear Gleb announce that the portage was almost three-quarters complete. Defences relaxed; a few men at a time could now slump for a rest on a pile of furs or a barrel of pickled meat. Hakon, trailed by his dogs, wandered the beach, dragging the gilded spear point of his enormous, gold-inlaid broad-axe in the sand. He saw Jarl Rognvald, Gleb and Haraldr and walked over, grinning like a beaver. ‘Jarl Rognvald,’ he called out as he approached, ‘you see what has happened, don’t you? The turd-suckers know Mar Hunrodarson well, and it seems that they have also heard of his man, Hakon Fire-Eyes.’ He raised his axe to his chest. They won’t come against us.’ With comic emphasis Hakon warily rubbed a finger over his immaculate axe blade. ‘Folk-Mower, here, is angry with the corpse-eating savages. He is thirsty for the wine of ravens.’ Then Hakon swivelled his sparking eyes towards Haraldr with feral menace. ‘Why, Green-wood! I hardly recognized you in your battle toys. And on your feet instead of your knees!’ He rapped Haraldr’s breastplate. ‘You must have bashed up some old woman’s kettle to make this.’ Haraldr was annoyed at his own passive, silent response; it was as if his body and mind were suddenly drained of will, even thought.

  Bored with this game, Hakon wandered back to his ship, detailed some more of his Varangians upriver, then talked with his two concubines and some slave girls before returning with his hawk on his arm. ‘Pelican harrier!’ he announced to everyone within earshot, his grin boyish and proud. He removed the plumed golden hood from the sturdy, chevron-breasted bird.

  Gleb wrinkled his red, swollen nose. ‘I don’t like that smell.’

  ‘My hawk smells better than you, louse-eating Slav!’ snapped Hakon.

  Gleb ignored Hakon and looked at Jarl Rognvald. He had not been referring to the bird. The hawk spiralled into the air, and Gleb continued to sniff. Haraldr noticed that Hakon’s dogs had pricked up their ears. He retrieved his spear.

  A puff of feathers in the coppery haze. Hakon’s hawk fell towards the river like a stone. ‘Shield-wall!’ shouted Gleb.

  The wailing shriek that came from the woods pierced even the monstrous plaint of Aeifor. The first wave of Pechenegs seemed, almost deliberately, to fall
on the upraised spears of the hastily constructed shield-wall, though in fact they were pushed by the crush from behind. Within moments the shield-wall staggered back from the sheer weight of the Pechenegs, then fractured. The horde poured through, and this time, unlike in Stiklestad, Haraldr watched death stalk in the searing light of day. He was pushed back inexorably towards the river, a witless participant in a mortal dance. He watched with idiotic clarity as the polychrome Pecheneg horde surged to the river’s edge on his left and Hakon’s dazzlingly metallic Varangian force retreated with shocking alacrity even farther to the left, falling back upriver, disappearing through a clump of trees. He could see the figure of Hakon in his golden byrnnie, as distinctly as a magically animated little statue, running.

  The hostile Dnieper was the only refuge for those who had not fled or already fallen to the swarming Pechenegs: Haraldr, Jarl Rognvald, Gleb, and maybe half a dozen Varangians who either had had the misfortune to miss Hakon’s precipitous retreat or had the good sense to protect the expedition’s pilot. Before his boots were even half submerged, Haraldr could feel the icy current swiping at his legs. When the rushing snow-melt seized his testicles, Haraldr heard the dark voice from the pit of his soul: you are going to die.

  The vanguard of the Pecheneg horde stood at the water’s edge, a jeering riot of antic brown limbs and flashing blades. They were less than thirty ells away. An archer wearing only a loincloth came out to test the water and made it half-way to the tight cluster of Norsemen before he shot down the river as if yanked on a string. A hundred ells downriver, his head went under, not to be seen again.

  But the Dnieper offered a precarious sanctuary even for the huge Norsemen. One of the Varangians lost his footing, and the entire group staggered before they could make common cause against the rushing river. When they had steadied somewhat, the tallest Varangian spoke. He Was about Haraldr’s age and size, and impressively handsome. His voice was as calm as if he were sitting on a stump whittling a stick. ‘Hakon will be here within a quarter of an hour,’ he assured his comrades. ‘He was wise to fall back and summon the rest of the Varangians from upriver. Soon the corpses of these shitheads will be colder than we are.’

 

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