I bounded up the spotlessly clean steps and into the library. I hurried through it, not stopping, but still noticing how cheerful it seemed. I passed along the neatly swept corridors, and nodded a greeting to the silent statue of Demosthenes. Just before reaching the silent courtroom, I took a left into a small sitting room that had once been where the judge rested between sessions, and stepped behind the bookrack that obscured the far wall. I knocked three times on the door that no one else had so far managed to notice. ‘You can come out now,’ I said happily. ‘Everything is sorted.’
I paused and knocked again. Now, I snorted and pushed the door open. I looked about the empty room that had no windows. Even in the darkness, I knew it was empty. There was no smell of a lamp that had gone out. For all I could tell, it had been empty all day. ‘Back in her own rooms,’ I muttered.
But she wasn’t there – not, at least, unless she’d managed to turn herself to mist and seep under the door that was still closed with the Dispensator’s seal on its lock. I shrugged and thought of my own bedroom. I brightened again. Yes, I thought – where else could be more appropriate?
As I was taking the steps down from the library, two at a time, I heard a muffled shout, as if of fear or pain. As I stopped, it stopped, and I stood for a moment, not breathing in, but wondering if I’d been mistaken. I was at the foot of the steps when I heard a babble of distant voices, and now another shrill and horrified scream. Even on my ninth day since first stepping through the gate, noises in the residency could still confuse me. Had these come from the corridors leading to my own rooms? Had they come from the grand room? Had they even come from behind the far door in the library?
But there was now a loud crash of something falling, or being broken apart, and this noise definitely came from the ground floor of the library block. It was beside or past those big arched supports I’d seen only once. I took a left at the bottom of the library steps. The door leading to the row of arched supports was ajar. As I pushed it open and stepped into one of the many areas that I’d left off the cleaning schedule, I heard yet another scream, this one much closer. I could have sworn it came from the slave dungeon where I’d stood with Priscus. I stood still and listened. Then I heard another crash as if of breaking wood, and, in a familiar voice, the cry: ‘Back, spawn of Satan! Who will save you now?’
Most scenes can be described with very few words. Even moments of high drama normally take place against a background familiar enough to be alluded to and not closely described. What I’d now stumbled across, however, has no familiar elements, and I must struggle to avoid the prolixity of a submission at law.
I was halfway down the stairs into that room filled with skeletons. These were now completely disarranged in what looked like some vague effort at clearing the place. Or there might have been a long struggle. The room was brightly lit from the flames of two torches set into the wall brackets. But I could give only a passing look at the evidence of past atrocities. All my attention was focused on the here and now.
Her clothing smeared with dark gobbets of what could only be congealed blood, Euphemia had one of those manacles about her left wrist. She’d pressed herself against the wall, and was holding up a severed head in both hands. As I looked on in silence, she took it away from her face. She saw me, and spat out a mouthful of dark jelly. It fell on to her breast, then continued on to the floor with a quiet splash.
‘Alaric,’ she cried in a choking voice, ‘help me!’
Balthazar wheeled round and gave me a stare of utter madness. ‘Don’t go near her!’ he shrieked. ‘This is her time of weakness! The Goddess is strong within me!’
I saw the bloody knife that he held in his right hand. I saw the smashed wooden box at his feet, about the size of a coffin. I saw the naked body from which the head had just been cut. I looked back at the head that Euphemia now threw into the middle of the room. It was the blond boy that old Gundovald had been fussing about for the past four days. I forced myself not to look into the dull eyes and looked back at Euphemia.
‘Thank God it’s you, Alaric,’ she cried, now with a smile that sent another gobbet of dark jelly on to her chin. ‘He was trying to kill me.’
I hurried down the crumbling steps and moved towards her.
‘Oh, please, Alaric,’ she implored, holding out both arms, ‘please, get me out of here. It’s horrible.’
Balthazar rushed at me and put up his hands to push me back. ‘Keep away!’ he shouted. ‘Don’t let her touch you!’
Theodore might have had more strength in his body to restrain me. I pushed Balthazar hard in the chest, and he crashed head first against the wall. He slid down on to the floor and started a long coughing attack. Then he groaned and pitched forward into a silence in which only his shuddering breaths showed that he was still alive. I blinked and looked about me again. I stepped back and tried frantically to make sense of what I was seeing.
‘He sacrificed the boy before my very eyes,’ Euphemia whimpered. ‘He forced me to do such horrible things. Will I ever be clean again?’ She burped and more of that disgusting jelly leaked out on to her chin. She smiled suddenly and reached out her arms again. I heard the short chain rattle that held her to the wall. ‘Get this off me, Alaric,’ she said, her voice now taking on a low, husky quality. ‘Let’s just get out of here into the daylight.’
I bent forward and made myself touch the headless corpse. I straightened up and looked again at Balthazar. He was only stunned. In a few moments, he’d come back to life. I pointed at one of the manacles that now hung loose on the wall. ‘Get that about one of his wrists,’ I commanded.
She stretched forward as far as she could manage and grabbed at Balthazar, and fiddled ineffectually at first with the bracelet of dark bronze. At last, though, she had it about him. She got to her feet and came forward to the point where the chain stretched tight.
I ignored the new flood of pleading and endearments and bent down to touch the dead boy.
I stood up and wiped my hand on the lower part of my tunic. ‘You say the boy has just been killed?’ I asked in the neutral tone I’d learned to use when sitting in court.
She nodded eagerly, and moved her arms again so that the chain gave another of its dull rattles.
‘I’d say he’s been dead for days.’ I stood back and sat carefully on one of the lower steps that led down from the referred light of the long passageway outside the arch. ‘Tell me, Euphemia, what really happened.’
She tried to smile and repeated what could only be a pack of lies. Every elaboration of the story had to be another lie. I gave up on following the incidental details and looked over at the body where it sprawled in the remains of the cobwebs. It must have been carried down in the long wooden box that lay smashed on the far side of the room. I couldn’t explain the three sets of footprints in the room. None of them was mine. Probably the body had been taken from the box and somehow guided rather than dragged across the room. All I could say for sure was that Balthazar could never have carried the box down here by himself – nor have lifted the body from it. Doubtless, he’d cut off the head. Beyond that, the explanation of present facts was blurred by a dawning realisation of others.
‘You helped kill that girl – didn’t you?’ I asked suddenly.
A proper denial would have been all the answer I needed – all the answer I wanted. The brief look that flashed across her face was the equivalent of any confession that might have emerged from the longest cross-examination.
I leaned forward and put my head in both hands. ‘There’s no point asking for reasons of those who are mad,’ I said. ‘It’s enough that the pair of you have been in this together – even if you both might claim somehow to have been working against each other.’ All the woman had to do was give me a few words of decent explanation. Instead, I looked straight away from where she’d pulled up her clothing to show her thighs and the middle parts of her body. I looked away from her lush, voluptuous smile. I took a deep breath, then made myself stare at her a
gain.
‘How many have you sacrificed in the past few years?’ I asked. ‘What did you do with the blood? Don’t tell me you were drinking it.’ I thought of a sorcery scandal back in Constantinople that had sent Heraclius into a frenzy. ‘Were you bathing in it? Is that why the latrines stank to high heaven?’ I had a further thought. ‘Why did you kill Irene?’ I asked. ‘Why the maids?’
Oh – if only she’d found the presence of mind to jump in and stop this entire train of questioning! It wouldn’t have taken much, after all. I wanted to believe I was talking nonsense. But she only simpered and pulled her clothes up to her neck. She spread her legs where she sat in the filth of centuries and groaned with simulated lust.
She heard the scrape of my sandals as I got up, and struggled to get her face clear of the clothing. ‘Get me out of this, Alaric,’ she pleaded, holding up her left wrist. ‘We can go out into the light together, just as you said we would. It will be you and me and little Theodore. We can all go to Constantinople together. It will be just as you’ve always wanted.’
I stared down at her through slitted eyes. The lawyers admit there are classes of madness that absolve from any guilt. But she’d known enough of what she was doing to hide it from the world. Even if she really was what she plainly believed she was, her actions would still have been wrong. Murder is murder, and justice must always be done.
‘If you look properly at your manacle,’ I said in my coldest and most judicial voice, ‘you will see that it was made not to come off.’ I turned and willed myself to blot out those horrified screams as I made my way carefully back to the top of the steps. The wooden door was inches thick, and pushing it shut muffled the worst of the screams. I tried and tried to push the bolts into place. But ages of rust had caused them to swell and seize, and I found myself twisting them to no effect.
It was now that my legs gave way, and I fell sobbing to the floor – sobbing with the horror of all I’d seen, and with the horror of what I was now doing. I might have pulled the door open again and gone back down. Even before the faint cries from within began to fade, I’d found myself starting all over again to tremble with lust. If I shut my eyes, all I could now see was how she’d spread her legs in the filth. It was suddenly as arousing as it had been disgusting. I do think I was about to scramble back to my feet, when I heard a quiet chuckle behind me.
‘It needs more than main force to get those things back in,’ Priscus said.
I twisted round and looked into the pale and ghastly face. His arms bandaged from the application of the opium, his whole body trembling with the strain of standing upright, he still managed a long and wheezing laugh as he gloated down at me.
‘Get up,’ he ordered in a surprisingly firm voice. ‘Push the door as hard as you can. Try to lift it slightly in its hinges.’
I did as I was told, and he took over fiddling with the bolts. At last, there was a sharp grating as first one and then the other was pushed back more or less as they’d been found five days before. I flopped back to the floor, and would have begun crying in earnest.
But Priscus kicked me hard in my side. ‘If a job is worth doing at all, my dear boy, it’s worth doing well,’ he sneered. ‘There’s the other door yet to be closed. Come on, get to your feet. Do as Uncle Priscus directs.’ He wheezed out another laugh. ‘Yes, come on, my pretty. Let’s be out of this gloom. Can you believe there are times when even I want to be in the light?’
The slaves had left the key in the outer door. Once I’d pushed and pulled until the lock fell back into place, and we were into a silence broken only by his ragged breathing and my continuing sobs, Priscus kicked me again. He kicked me until I got back up from where I’d sat down. He struck me lightly on the cheek. I then had to catch him as he staggered backwards, and almost carry him back to the main part of the residency. I looked at the door that closed off the whole block from which we’d come. Priscus held up the key that I knew would also lock this one, but shook his head.
‘I’ll give orders later for the door to the arch to be bricked over,’ he said. ‘A coat of rendering over it all, and no one will ever know about the door.’ He clutched tightly on the key and let me carry him out into the increasingly dim light of the main courtyard.
‘How much did you hear?’ I asked as I looked up at the still bright sky.
‘Enough to let me guess everything else,’ he said. ‘Don’t allow it to get you down, though. Even if living here with Nicephorus for company turned her wits, she really was a bad sort. Since no one else dared tell you about it, I thought I’d let you find out for yourself. As for Balthazar, he did have it coming.’ He paused. ‘I wonder who’ll eat whom?’ he asked without looking down at me.
I said nothing.
He smiled and sat slowly down beside me. ‘I may have an odd way of showing it sometimes,’ he went on. ‘But you really must believe, darling Alaric, that I do like you very much. If you choose never to discuss this matter again, I promise not to raise it of my own motion.’
I said nothing, and we sat together in silence as the sky turned dark, and, one by one, the stars began to come out. The wild flowers were turning pale in the dusk, and I could tell it would be a chilly evening, when Priscus finally told me to help him up, and we turned to go in and see what progress Sveta had made with the packing.
‘I don’t think I can be blamed for any dereliction of duty,’ Priscus opened as we passed into one of the lit areas of the residency. ‘I can still regret, though, that I wasn’t able to direct things yesterday as they reached their crisis. I have no doubt, however, your report to Heraclius will narrate things not as they were, but as they should have been.’ He stopped and looked slyly into my face. ‘After all, my dearest of friends, we do stand or fall together.’ He leaned against the wall for support and giggled.
I said nothing, but looked into a bronze mirror someone had hung on the wall to reflect daylight along the corridor. So far as I could tell in the gathering darkness, even the dull red mark of my spots had now faded. It was as if they’d never been there. I stared long at the smooth and supremely beautiful face in the mirror. And still I said nothing.
Epilogue
Canterbury, Wednesday, 10 June 688
Oh, what a great heap of papyrus I’ve made again! And how my wrist aches from the burden of covering it all in my spidery Greek handwriting. I do allow there is more that I ought to say. I have stopped almost still in the middle of things. But this is as much as I feel inclined to say.
Well, there is a little more that I need to say. I did get my unanimous vote, and I even went back home in a triumph that Heraclius didn’t choose to piss all over – not, at least, in the short term, and not deliberately. Yes, I’d done what anyone might have thought the impossible, and got provisional agreement on the doctrine of a Single Will for Christ. We did nothing with it at first. There was still a long war to fight and win. But, once the Persians had been driven back and utterly destroyed, Sergius and the Emperor brought all sides together in our long-promised ecumenical council, and it seemed that agreement had been reached. I stepped modestly back and let others take the credit, but I had finally settled the Monophysite heresy on terms that both sides could reasonably call a victory for their own position.
Or so I was able to think for a couple of years. Sadly, the Church authorities in Rome eventually decided that the Sergian Compromise was itself heretical, and anathematised it under the new name of the Monothelite heresy. By then, however, it no longer mattered. The Empire had put forward what was nearly its last effort to regain Egypt and Syria from the Persians. We had nothing left when the Saracens popped out of nowhere to take them away from us again. It was rotten luck, everyone agreed, and it meant that Heraclius ended his reign on a disastrous note that even I couldn’t avoid for him.
As said, though, the new dispute no longer mattered. The loss of the Monophysite areas was a military and strategic disaster, but removed all need for theological compromise, and the Empire was easily brought back
to orthodoxy as it was maintained by Rome. His Grace Theodore, even before he was made Bishop of Canterbury, was of critical importance in all communications between Rome and Constantinople; and it was due largely to his own efforts that the dispute was settled as it was.
It could have been different, mind you. We can blame the Saracens all we like. But they’d have got nowhere if the Syrians and Egyptians hadn’t been so utterly disenchanted with the victorious and restored Empire. As ever, it was that bloody fool Heraclius who was the real villain. If only he’d left things with Sergius and me, the Pope himself would have lain down with the followers of Eutyches. Instead, he’d had to keep telling everyone he was the Emperor, and that all should believe as he directed. Then there was the army of tax-gatherers he set loose on provinces that were already bled white by the Persians. No wonder it all went tits up.
But it was such a very long time ago, and it does me no good to set myself brooding over it again. What does matter is how fat Sophronius will take my story. He came in and stood over me the other day, clucking over how much longer I’d take. He told me then he’d brought in a couple of monks from France who could translate my Greek into Latin. He’ll scream blue murder if he ever gets to read the unvarnished truth about the Little Council of Athens. It may not show a Pope as directly in error. It doesn’t say much good, though, about Saint Fortunatus of the Lateran – whose dying breath, sealed in a vessel of many-coloured crystal, has worked so many undoubted and miraculous cures of the feeble-minded.
The Ghosts of Athens (Aelric) Page 45