by Mary Reed
Except none appeared.
Nothing spilled from the opened hive except a bundle of dirty rags.
John bent and picked it up.
A yellowing bone fell out.
He yanked at the string tied around the bundle. A medallion hung from it.
John glared at Apollo. “That’s an ecclesiastical seal. What are you doing with a hive full of relics?”
Apollo looked astonished. “Excellency, I have no idea. Someone has taken advantage of me. Alas! What did the villains do to the poor bees that were in there? For all I know my beauties are wandering Alexandria, homeless!”
***
Since Apollo continued to profess ignorance about the surprising contents of his hive, John decided to ask Melios how much he knew about the itinerant beekeeper who took advantage of his hospitality every year.
As he reached the row of palms shading the side of the headman’s house he heard his name spoken.
There was an argument going on inside the building.
On further listening, it seemed he was mistaken since the subject under heated discussion did not involve him.
“As for your assessments, Scrofa, I have declared everything!”
The voice belonged to Melios. It came through an unshuttered window a few paces away.
“Anyone who claims I have hidden anything can be brought here to accuse me to my face!” Melios went on. “In fact, I insist upon it! People better have proof of their outrageous claims! Hidden assets indeed! I wish I had assets to hide! I told your predecessor the same thing last year when Dedi, that miserable charlatan, tried to get me into difficulties with the authorities.”
“Yes, so I heard. In fact, I was instructed to closely examine this Dedi,” came the reply in quiet Greek. “However, I always begin my work of assessment with the headman of a settlement. After all, isn’t he the most important person in the area?”
“Certainly!” Melios sounded mollified by the tactful reply. “I shall be happy to open my accounts for your inspection first thing tomorrow morning if that would suit you. I’d have had them available immediately had you not arrived early this year.”
“That will be acceptable, Melios.”
The scrape of a stool and closing of a door announced the tax assessor was leaving.
Egypt was a simple country as well as a superstitious one, John thought. In Constantinople wise men did not conduct personal business beside open windows.
He lingered outside, looking after the departing man before entering the house. Though many who toiled in the imperial administration tended to be thin of frame, Scrofa was broad-shouldered and well-muscled. He was obviously a man in excellent physical condition, one who would be difficult to intimidate and doubtless chosen specially for the job when the time came around to undertake the highly unpopular task of yearly tax assessments.
Melios was in the reception hall where he had entertained John before. He appeared agitated, but he greeted his unexpected visitor warmly enough. “Lord Chamberlain, I was going to seek you out. What brings you to my door?”
“I wish to question you about the beekeeper.”
“Apollo? He’s been visiting me for some time now. He supplies me with honey in return for allowing him to keep his bees here for a few weeks every year. It’s a simple arrangement, one with which we are both happy.”
“A few pots of honey are not much of a fee for the privilege of staying here,” John pointed out. “Given the tax problems you’ve mentioned, I’d expect you to charge more.”
Melios’ womanish mouth tightened. “Well, I don’t. May I ask you the reason for your interest?”
“I have just discovered that Apollo appears to be smuggling religious relics in his hives.”
Melios did not seem either shocked or offended. “Is he? It’s nothing to do with me, excellency! For all I know he’s decided to start selling them to Dedi’s pilgrims. After all, my own head gardener sells flasks of sacred oil to visitors. That sort of transaction is commonplace here and in many other places, Lord Chamberlain.”
Melios paused. His gaze turned to the depictions of Constantinople scenes adorning the walls. “You are a cosmopolitan man, Lord Chamberlain. I am deeply honored you and your party are my guests. Such men as yourself are always welcome in my household, but I see so few of them. We two are men of culture and learning, students of philosophy, and lovers of the arts, isn’t that true?”
“You flatter me, Melios.”
“I only speak the truth. I mentioned I had been about to seek you out. I wished to inform you of a small gathering I’ve planned in your honor. At least we can put this nasty business of the sheep behind us for an evening.”
Chapter Twenty-six
Anatolius felt uneasy as he labored up the steep street toward the monumental cross marking Senator Symacchus’ house. He was not being entirely truthful with either Felix or Europa. What would they think when they found out?
Could they be of more assistance if he shared his knowledge? John’s life was at stake, as well as the lives of Cornelia and Peter.
Assassins left no witnesses.
He had his doubts about Thomas.
Except for the fact that Europa remained in Constantinople, Anatolius would not have been surprised if Thomas took to his heels rather than travel to Egypt to warn John. On the other hand, Thomas had lingered in the city after talking to Anatolius after John’s departure.
That proved he did not intend to flee.
Didn’t it?
Anatolius tried to put his misgivings aside. He couldn’t help thinking how vulnerable John would be in Egypt. The wise man was always wary at the palace. In Egypt, John would have no reason to be alert for the stealthy footstep, the sidelong glance, the shadowy figure moving around the corner. In a place where everything was unfamiliar, would John be able to sense the subtle disturbance of the normal that signaled danger?
Surely John would not let down his guard?
A stray dog loped toward him, blunt nails clicking on the street. The animal’s ribs were visible. It wrinkled its muzzle and growled. Anatolius shouted a lurid curse and the dog turned tail and ran.
If only all problems could be so easily solved.
Anatolius’ rap on the senator’s door was again answered by the slim, deep-voiced servant Diomedes.
“I’m assisting the Quaestor with the senator’s estate,” Anatolius explained. “I’ve come to retrieve certain items to deliver to a legatee.” He presented Diomedes with the authorization Perigenes had provided. It had been an unwise move, Anatolius felt, because there would surely be claims on the estate that would cause numerous administrative difficulties. It would be as well for Perigenes if he found a buyer for his position as soon as possible.
Diomedes led Anatolius down a hallway adorned with crosses and pedestals bearing basalt sculptures of Egyptian deities. They arrived at a room piled high with chests and sacks. Diomedes rummaged around and eventually handed Anatolius a sandalwood box of a size suitable for storing jewelry. Inside, Anatolius found a dozen stoppered, cylindrical clay bottles, none longer than his forefinger.
“That’s the master’s collection of pilgrim flasks, sir.”
Anatolius examined one. It sported a tiny handle on each side and bore an incised picture of a figure in a tunic standing between two camels. St. Menas was written above the scene in barely legible Greek letters. “How unusual! Do you know where he purchased these?”
“They were gifts from his guests. Everyone who took advantage of the senator’s hospitality presented him with a token of their appreciation. I don’t suppose these crude little things cost much.” His tone conveyed his opinion of the generosity of the senator’s guests.
“What is their purpose?”
“Miracles, sir. Each of these flasks is filled with oil from a lamp in a martyr’s tomb, or water from a spring near the spot where a miracle occurred. It’s said these mementos possess holy powers from being in c
lose proximity to such holy sites.”
Anatolius examined the collection. Several flasks bore the same inscription and scene as the first. One or two were incised with simple crosses, while another featured both a cross and a broad, wavy line. It was a crude but effective attempt to render the sea and so doubtless most appealing to pious mariners, he thought.
“Did Senator Symacchus ever mention Bishop Crispin?”
“No, sir, not to me, but perhaps his bequest will serve to lessen the bishop’s disappointment that the master failed to obtain the Egyptian relic he had promised him.”
“And you know this because…?”
Diomedes reddened. “Achilles told me, sir. One of the senator’s guests, a fellow called Melios, talked about it constantly and Achilles overheard. He was always gossiping about the master’s business. I warned him more than once it would lead to trouble, but he took no notice.”
“Indeed. Tell me, were you in the senator’s employment when the former page Hektor worked here?”
“No, sir. Hektor was a reader, like myself. Servants who’ve been here longer than I recall him well.”
Anatolius did not reply. His gaze wandered over the contents of the room. From a shallow basket he plucked one of a number of enameled metal crosses.
“I’ll take this with me as well, Diomedes. I’ll notify the Quaestor’s office I have it. The bishop’s legacy only mentions pilgrim flasks, but I am certain he will appreciate this small item too.”
Chapter Twenty-seven
Cornelia persuaded John to take a walk after sunset brought a welcome coolness to the air.
Behind them the buildings on the estate subsided into dark shapes dotted with stray will-o’-the-wisps of lamplight. Starlight glimmered on irrigation ditches. A sickle moon rode hungrily low on the horizon.
After a lengthy silence, Cornelia laid her hand on John’s arm. “My thoughts often turn to those we left behind in Constantinople.”
John looked down at her. “I understand how you feel, Cornelia. I think of them often too.”
“And when my thoughts aren’t in Constantinople, they’re here, but in the past. Being together again, in this land, feels almost as it did then.”
John’s hand rested for an instant on hers. “Tell me, why did you never marry?”
The question took Cornelia by surprise. “I never thought of marrying. When you didn’t return, I kept hoping…”
“I was an impetuous young man. I could have decided I didn’t want to be tied down.”
“You might have decided to leave me, John, but you would have told me so. You would never have crept away in the night.”
John nodded. “Even so, many years passed before we met again.”
“It didn’t seem so long, especially with a daughter to raise. So I waited for your return, and meantime kept hoping I might see you in the audience in some dusty town square.” She laughed softly. “I never realized you had risen to such high office, that it would be necessary for the troupe to perform in the Hippodrome in order to find you again.”
“If I had thought our lives could be the way they were before, I’d have sought you out, no matter where you were. I would have been content to remain with you, no matter how small or dusty the village. But, of course, it cannot be that way.”
“Why did you suppose it cannot be, John?”
Before John could answer, light flared in the sky.
“Look!” Cornelia pointed to a fiery ball that soared above Mehenopolis’ thick canopy and mounted swiftly past the sickle moon into the heavens above the Rock of the Snake.
Suddenly the air was filled an unearthly screeching, as if someone had cracked open the door to the Christian hell to allow the sound of souls screaming in endless agony to emerge.
Shouts echoed from the direction of the estate.
John and Cornelia ran toward it.
Above, the fireball wheeled and looped, throwing off showers of sparks. Long shadows spun wildly over the path and gardens along their way.
Then the flying thing fell like a burning rock.
The terrible screeching ended abruptly.
Red light danced in the open space in front of Melios’ barn. The stack of straw was ablaze. Men ran up, shouting and gesticulating, shaking their fists at the now empty sky. A child toddled past unattended, sucking its thumb and whimpering.
“It’s Hecate come to kill everyone!” an indistinct figure cried. “Only Dedi can save us!”
“No, it’s an angel sent to punish us for listening to Dedi, that blaspheming bastard!” another shadow answered.
Words were exchanged that Cornelia couldn’t make out. Then, deciding to reinforce his theological position, one of the debaters shoved the other, whose quick refutation consisted of a fist to his opponent’s jaw. Several onlookers stepped forward to join the incipient fray.
Cornelia noticed the tall, stooped figure of the old cleric, Zebulon. He strode toward the melee and without hesitation grabbed one of the fighters by the shoulder.
“Stop it! Do you think heaven would reveal itself with a cheap display such as this? If the Lord wanted to deliver a message He’d do more than send an angel to set fire to a pile of straw.”
The fighters looked abashed. Grumbling darkly, they turned away from each other.
Zebulon glanced around, shook his head, saw the unattended toddler, and contented himself with taking the child’s hand. “Come along, little one. We’ll find your mother.”
Cornelia and John made their way through the crowd toward the fire.
Sheep bleated frantically and servants cursed as they ran back and forth between the pond and the blaze, throwing ineffectual buckets of water at the conflagration.
Melios stood a short distance off, clasping and unclasping his hands. His milky eye shone like that of a wild animal.
“You need a bucket line,” John told him.
The headman stared as if he’d been struck dumb.
“Organize a bucket line before you lose your barn!” John said.
“Have you seen Apollo?” The headman’s gaze darted to the air, then side to side, as if he expected another flaming apparition to come flying at him any instant. “His bees don’t like smoke. I don’t want swarms of angry insects everywhere.”
John proceeded to organize the frantic servants himself. Some he grabbed by their arms and he yelled and gestured at others, cursing profusely.
“I’m surprised to hear the Lord Chamberlain has the regrettable vocabulary of a dock worker,” said a voice at Cornelia’s shoulder.
Zebulon had returned.
“He’s in the habit of cursing in Coptic because so few in Constantinople understand it,” Cornelia explained. “I suppose he’s forgotten here he’s using the native tongue.”
“And using it extremely colorfully, if deplorably, though I will say most effectively.”
Already the men had formed a chain and begun to pass brimming buckets of water along it in rapid succession.
“The flying demon will make a good subject for a homily,” Zebulon remarked, “although I had been thinking I could base a meditation on a more prosaic horror recently visited upon us.”
He inclined his head in the direction of Melios’ house, toward which a burly figure strode.
“I mean of course the tax assessor,” he went on. “No doubt Scrofa is worried assessable property might go up in flames. However, I notice he doesn’t seem anxious to help prevent any losses.”
Recalling her brief conversation with the assessor, Cornelia suspected Scrofa was just as likely to be taking advantage of the commotion to search the house to establish if Melios was hiding undeclared property. “Now you mention it, where has Melios gone?”
“Perhaps he doesn’t have a quotation from the classics appropriate to this occasion? In any event, the Lord Chamberlain seems to have taken the situation in hand. Don’t forget, Cornelia, I am always ready for a game of Mehen.”
&nb
sp; A big man appeared on the scene.
“You need some muscle here,” he shouted at John.
It was the charioteer, Porphyrios. He took his place at the end of the line, flexed his sinewy arms, grabbed hold of the next bucket as if it were a wine pitcher, and tossed the water in a long coruscating arc.
A few dark fragments of ash, ringed in bright orange, floated upwards, rotating slowly, and drifted away.
There was a sudden bray of anguish.
Startled, Porphyrios looked around.
The donkey tethered near the barn was trying to back away from a large patch of dried weeds the flying sparks had set afire.
Porphyrios dropped his bucket.
John picked it up. “Untie the donkey, Porphyrios. Quick!” he ordered.
“Me?”
“Yes, you!”
Porphyrios grimaced. “Ah…what about the next bucket…”
Seeing the charioteer’s confusion, Cornelia sprinted over to the distressed animal and set it loose. As it galloped off across the flower beds, Porphyrios doused the smaller fire.
For a little while Cornelia stood and watched John. He worked quickly and efficiently, issuing occasional orders, working alongside the servants, his manner decisive.
Since the fire was soon brought under control, she decided to return to their temporary lodgings. Turning to leave, she saw Thorikos running toward her. Even in the dying firelight she could see he was breathless with exertion and excitement.
“Isn’t this a wonder?” the rotund traveler gasped. “The entire settlement must have seen that flaming demon! What tales I’ll have to tell! Who would’ve thought a dull fellow like me would ever witness such sights?”
Not pausing for a reply he hurried on toward what remained of the night’s drama.
Cornelia decided to take a short cut back rather than following the path. As she moved away from the remains of the blaze, the night closed around her. The sliver of a moon faintly silvered the ground before her.
The hubbub of voices faded. Now she could hear the buzz and chirp of insects.
Walking slowly, she kept her gaze on the ground.