Maria collapsed to the floor, and her quenched eyes rolled into her head. Only a sliver of blue iris remained visible.
The enormous statue of Constantine the Great stood over the Forum, vainly awaiting the first rays on its bronze head; the day would likely remain cloudy, threatening rain. Good, thought the new Prefect of the City, Stephanus Anastasius, as he entered the vast column-ringed oval. He noticed with satisfaction that the crowd was sparse, in anticipation of the weather. The pharmacological vendors, their wooden boxes full of vials and jars, already had queues, as people who had become ill during the night were wont to come here early. The shopkeepers in the arcades had begun to arrange their displays; bright piece goods flashed here and there behind the columns. The indigent scholars sat beside their books, waiting for pupils or, more likely, a good argument with which to while away their day. Fortunately none of the usual rabble-rousers were about; they would generally begin their harangues later in the morning. Two Venetian sailors in short tunics walked round the great column, staring up and gawking.
The Prefect spurred his white horse to a quick canter across the paved Forum. He reined to a halt beneath the statue; his horse was dwarfed by the massive pyramidal stone base. The seven porphyry drums lifted the colossal bronze figure of the long-dead Emperor far overhead. The Prefect dismounted and quickly unrolled his purple-tinted text. A group of labourers heading for the docks pointed and hurried over. Two meat vendors in stained tunics left an apothecary’s queue and walked across the plaza. The Prefect looked around at the timeless audience, the statues that stood atop the arcade roof all around the Forum. They were always listening, he thought. He decided he must begin.
‘Children of Rome, your Emperor, Autocrator and Basileus greets you. He asks that you acknowledge a new triumph which the Pantocrator has enabled him to achieve. A treacherous endeavour to deny the authority of the Pantocrator and usurp His Vice-Regent, indeed cleave from His Eternal Body His hand on Earth, has been crushed by the diligence of your Father and his beloved children. The two traitors have been identified, yet with Christ-like forbearance they have been spared a punishment in kind for the crimes they intended to visit upon your Father. Instead they have been mercifully relieved of their offices and invited to repent at the Lord’s bosom. The names of the two traitors are Alexius, Patriarch of Constantinople, and the Empress and Augusta Zoe.’
The four labourers looked at one another in disbelief. One of the meat vendors flushed deeply. The Prefect quickly mounted, thanked the Heavenly Father for having created the swift-footed horse, and galloped out of the Forum, heading east towards the palace gates.
Michael sat on his throne in the Senate chamber. His purple boots jittered slightly on the gold-embroidered stool; his fingers tapped against the gilded armrests. Did Scylitzes ever close his mouth? The Emperor realized with immense satisfaction, however, that he could no longer hear Scylitzes’s words, only see his lips move. Michael continued his private conversation with the Pantocrator.
The Senators sat in tiers on either side of their Majesty, Magisters in their white-and-gold tunics, Proconsular Patricians with the purple porphyry diptychs of their dignity propped in their laps. Patricians displaying their inscribed ivory tablets. The white heat of the Dhynatoi nodded in senescent delight as Scylitzes’s intricate encomiums climaxed a morning of slavish approbation for their master’s bold stroke. They had lived to see the last legacy of the Bulgar-Slayer trodden into the dust. Both purple-born whores cast out in one daring venture: Zoe in exile; and the Patriarch Alexius, the only man who could bring Theodora back into the Imperial Palace, now besieged in the Mother Church, would soon be forced to give up his office, his church and his ambitions for his client. ‘Who could deny,’ concluded Scylitzes with pallium-pumping grandiloquence, ‘that this paragon of infinite virtue, this treasury of unsurpassed merit, this avatar of boundless magnanimity, now leaves the chronologies of the great Emperors, the Constantines and Justinians, to emblazon the earth far below his soaring majesty, and now ensconces the manifestations of his ever-endeavouring imperium in the exalted vaults of the firmament, to set his splendid throne among the deities!’
Michael nodded, indicating that he had received the Senate’s blessing with pleasure, and that the Senators should now come forward to kiss his knees. As the procession of supplicants went on to the shuffling of slippers and the rustling of silk, Michael and the Pantocrator discussed their mothers. You came to Your Mother, Your Maria, in the form of the Holy Spirit, remarked the Emperor. And so it was that you begat yourself by Your own Mother. I will visit my mother, my Maria, with my holy essence and beget myself again and again, through the centuries that Rome will rule the earth, until we call down the Final Judgement, and then together You and I will sit side by side again, in our golden throne in New Jerusalem. And I shall know Your Mother, and You shall know mine, and together we shall beget eternity from their loins.
Michael noticed that the Senators were leaving en masse, their hands crossed over their breasts. He nodded them out of the vast doors at the end of the chamber. When he was finally alone with his eunuchs, his seraphim and cherubim, he rose from his throne, descended from the dais, and danced in little circles on the floor.
Mar Hunrodarson was awakened two hours after sunrise by his second in command Gris Knutson, who had replaced Thorvald Ostenson while Ostenson conducted crucial business in Rus. Mar arose and slipped the ceremonial tunic of Droungarios over his head. Bianca Maria, the twelve-year-old virgin with whom Mar had chastely spent many of the nights of his exile in Italia, stirred in the bed and looked up at him with wondering dark eyes. The trip from Italia had held many astonishments for her. And yesterday afternoon she had stood atop this villa just off the Via Ignatium and seen the distant but clearly distinguishable wall of the great city.
‘Droungarios,’ said Knutson, extending a rolled and sealed document. ‘I thought you should read this right away. It bears the seal of the Patriarch Alexius.’ Knutson bowed and turned to leave. ‘No, Turmarch,’ commanded Mar. ‘You need to hear this. Soon you will have many more responsibilities than simply dealing with queries from a priest of Rome.’ Mar opened the seal and read quickly. He looked up at Knutson. This is most interesting, Turmarch. The Patriarch Alexius has been deposed and the Empress Zoe has been banished. The Patriarch is besieged in the Hagia Sophia. He says his client Theodora is secured somewhere in the city. The wily old fox does not say where. He begs us to relieve him, and then he will lead us to the new Empress.’
‘Isn’t that entirely to our purpose?’ asked Knutson, his grey Danish eyes thoughtful. ‘With the Empress Zoe banished, Theodora would have no rivals.’
‘Except the Emperor.’
Knutson blinked away his confusion. ‘I thought the Emperor was . . . well, you know all the nights we have joked about what we would do with an Emperor in the interrogation chambers of the Numera.’
‘Yes, Turmarch, but that was before little Michael had displayed this unusual ability to rid us of our problems. Consider that under the patronage of Theodora we will always be subject to the coercion of her purple-born status. But with Michael as our patron, we will have only to overcome the legacy of a parvenue. We might even be hailed as liberators when we usurp him.’
Mar crushed Alexius’s missive in his huge fist. ‘Turmarch, convey a message to his Imperial Majesty. Tell him I have returned from Italia on a mission of necessary secrecy and utmost urgency. I will be arriving at Bucoleon Harbour this evening to discuss matters of vital importance to the future of Rome.’
Knutson snapped out of the room. Bianca Maria sat up; a silken white night robe draped her bony shoulders and barely pubescent breasts. ‘Will I see the city tonight?’ she asked in a high, clear voice like the ringing of the finest glass.
Mar gently touched the straight dark hair that cloaked her slender neck. ‘Yes, little candle,’ he said softly, ‘tonight you will see the Great Palace of the Roman Emperor.’
Constantine slammed the wo
oden shutter and pressed his hands to his ears. ‘Even their noise is an assault!’ he shouted to Demetrius Metanoites, the young Roman commander of his Pecheneg guard. Metanoites opened the shutter again to see for himself, and the intensity of the shrieking drone rose perceptibly. He shook his head in amazement. Two storeys below him, the street was awash with women and children, all of them wailing as if the Last Trumpet had blown; their brilliant, beardless faces, flushed with rage, were like a field of rose blossoms amid the dull colours of their tunics. The wooden shafts of various tools rose above them here and there, but the principal weapons of this army, other than noise, were stones. With every heartbeat another missile pelted the front of Constantine’s town palace; not a single pane of glass remained intact. And now the raging, wailing maenads had begun pounding away at the walls with large rocks.
‘We are going to have to summon the Taghmata!’ shouted Metanoites.
‘They won’t slaughter these innocents!’
‘Then we must break out! My Pechenegs have no such reservations about killing the women and children of Rome.’
‘We still could not get through. You have seen how many they are!’
Metanoites pulled his wiry black beard for a moment. ‘We will send the Pechenegs out of the front gate, and we will leave through the rear entrance. We will need to change into simple tunics!’
A quarter of an hour later Constantine unbolted the front gate and sent two dozen Pechenegs, swords unsheathed, into the street. The screams rose to a hideous din; Constantine saw a flash of enamel-brilliant crimson before he turned away. He and Metanoites raced through the main hall and kitchens and slammed against the rear door. They surprised several women who were setting refuse afire in the alley. The smoke provided good cover, and after a short dash to the street they were able to merge unnoticed with the crowd.
It took half an hour to work through the mob and reach the Mese. The broad avenue was frantic with merchants and tradesmen and even some barebacked porters up from the docks; most were running towards the palace, and many carried bows and spears. A portly man in a plain woollen tunic puffed along with a rusty sword in his ruddy fist. Women were also about on the Mese; one dashed past, clutching a linen veil to her face. ‘Where is our Mother, our beauty, our noble Empress?’ she moaned.
The arcades of the shops along the lower Mese were shuttered. A crowd blocked the entire Milion Square near the end of the Mese. Spear shafts rising above the milling wool-and-linen-cloaked figures were now common. ‘Where is our Mother?’ every rage-rouged face seemed to be screaming. Metanoites stumbled over a middle-aged woman dressed in widow’s black who had slumped to her knees; she beat her breast with her withered fists. ‘Oh, Theotokos! Oh, Theotokos! Deliver our Mother!’ she wailed.
‘The Mother of Rome!’ boomed a male voice. The Bulgar-Slayer’s niece, and him from nowhere!’
Metanoites led Constantine through the mob, shoving bodies aside with fierce determination. Constantine could only thank the Pantocrator that his rough servant’s tunic had spared him the deadly recognition of the mob. At the entrance to the Augustaion, Constantine looked to his left. The enormous bronze equestrian figure of Justinian charged above a lake of wailing faces that filled the entire square and spilled over to the porches of the Hagia Sophia. ‘Heavenly Father!’ he shouted to Metanoites. ‘The entire city has come out!’
The giant Imperial Eagles embossed on the Chalke Gate loomed ahead. Constantine and Metanoites struggled with terrified urgency through clusters of well-armed tradesmen arguing about how to assault the palace. Close to the gate, the crush was so oppressive that Constantine was lifted off his feet from time to time. His chest ached and at one point it seemed that the pressure of the crowd would suffocate him. Somehow Metanoites got him close enough that he could have spat on the huge bronze doors. But that was as close as they could get. Metanoites was also blocked by the surging mass, and he looked back at Constantine desperately.
‘I know one of the guards!’ shouted Constantine to a beefy-faced man next to him. ‘Let me up there and I will get him to open the gate!’ The beefy-faced man shouted to someone next to him, and soon a group of five or six pushed Constantine towards the small, man-sized door set within the colossal gates. The security grate, set at eye level, had been battered away. Constantine removed his seal ring and dropped it through the opening. A face flickered at the grate. ‘Let me in!’ screamed Constantine.
‘Let us in!’ bellowed the tradesmen who had pushed Constantine forward. ‘Let us at the swine who have taken our Mother!’ Suddenly the small door cracked open and arms thrust out and yanked Constantine inside. Metanoites tried to follow, but he was not recognized by the Khazars. Their swords ripped open his belly. The beefy-faced man also charged. His neck was hacked to the bone, and he slumped, blood gushing. The door slammed shut.
Constantine’s chest burned like the fires of Hell and his head whirled. He was alive. He wished he had gold to give the Khazars; he promised them gifts as they returned his ring. He requested an escort to the Chrysotriklinos. As he headed past the Hall of Nineteen Couches, Constantine was shocked to observe business as usual in the palace precinct. The silk-clad eunuchs and bureaucrats glided along the colonnaded avenue; only once did Constantine see two officials - lower-level secretaries to the Sacellarius - stop and discuss the furious din beyond the walls, a sound as clearly audible as an approaching cyclone.
Michael sat on his throne beneath the gold dome of the Chrysotriklinos, listening to a report on the virtually defunct tax-collection apparatus in Theodosiopolis theme. His eyebrows shot up when he saw Constantine approach in his soiled servant’s tunic. Michael nodded at his eunuchs, and the vast chamber was quickly cleared except for the Grand Eunuch and the Pecheneg guards in their gilded breastplates and plumed helmets. ‘Whatever are you doing, Uncle?’ asked Michael, as if he were merely concerned about some prank. ‘I am so disappointed that you could not attend my presentation to the Senate. They were quite taken with it.’
‘Majesty, I have scarcely escaped with my life from my own house. The captain of my guard is dead. The entire city is up in arms.’
Michael fanned his hand languidly. ‘Then I shall announce an event in the Hippodrome and put an end to it.’
Constantine approached the throne. ‘Nephew,’ he whispered, ‘would you please walk outside with me?’
Michael’s face contorted with boyish displeasure, but he nodded for his guard to surround him and followed Constantine out to the porch of the Chrysotriklinos. The vast dirge from the city came like a gale from the west; it was perceptibly louder than when Constantine had gone inside only moments before. Michael listened for a moment, then studied his purple boots for a long while, apparently carrying on some inner conversation. He looked up and smiled. ‘How incredible,’ he said effusively, his dark eyes glowing. ‘The Pantocrator has already sent the means of our deliverance from this rabble.’ Constantine looked at his nephew with concern. ‘Yes, Uncle. It is true. The former Hetairarch Mar Hunrodarson has returned to save us.’
The interior of the Hippodrome was already in twilight. Halldor was the first into the vast, empty stadium and his boots crunched in the neatly graded sand. He and Ulfr walked to the spina and stood beneath the bronze pylons at the south end of the stadium. Behind him followed the Blue Star, a short, plump figure firmly mounted on a donkey. The Varangians came next and clustered about the south end of the spina. And then the army of the city began to enter. Rank after rank after rank marched through the gates. They wore coarse wool and burlap tunics; some were in beggar’s rags, some in fine Greek wool. The men with spears entered first, then men with swords, hoes, rakes, scythes, hatchets, bows, butcher’s knives. And the women came in their own contingents, armed with stones and clubs. The track was quickly covered with these unlikely soldiers, and then even the seats began to fill up.
Halldor pointed to the Imperial Box, high up on the east side of the stadium. It was an enormous oblong structure that projected ver
tiginously over the tiers of seats below, its weight supported by thick marble columns. The Emperor’s seating pavilion resembled the portico of an ancient Greek temple, and this was flanked on both sides by balustraded balconies where dignitaries were usually seated; directly behind the Imperial seating pavilion was a long, flat terrace that bridged over to the adjoining Triclinium in the palace complex; the entire ponderous marble platform allowed no direct access from the seats below, unless one could shimmy up the marble pilings. And even if one could, armoured units of the Imperial Hyknatoi already waited on the balconies.
Those balconies are where the battle will be won or lost,’ he explained to the Blue Star. ‘They are an excellent platform for the defenders, but if we can take them, they will be the platform for our attack on the entire Palace. This is clearly our best opportunity to breach the palace defences. Elsewhere the walls are sheer, but here the seats give us a natural incline. It is never wise to attack up a hill if it can be avoided, but attacking up a hill is better than attacking straight up the sheer face of a mountain.’
The Blue Star nodded. ‘This is very different from what we expected last night, isn’t it, boy?’
Halldor looked around at the still-filling stadium. ‘Very different. But that is the nature of conflict. It always presents us with the unexpected.’
‘It is as if God sprinkled the earth with stars,’ said Bianca Maria. She stood at the railing as Mar’s dhromon glided past the city to the south. ‘What are the fires for?’
Byzantium - A Novel Page 79