I tried not to stiffen. At once, the street had lost all its post-massacre sadness. I looked at the row of silent buildings, and at the high, blank wall of the church. How far was it back to the inn? I could hear nothing. But Edward’s ears were sharper than mine, and he was looking intently along the street. I could see he was feeling again for his knife. I put on a friendly smile and was glad I’d come out in my best silk. I held my purse up and let the coins within jingle slightly.
‘Would it trouble you, O bearer of interesting news,’ I asked, ‘if I were to beg you to hurry to the nearest main street and engage a closed carrying chair?’ He gave me a dubious look. I opened my purse and took out a half solidus. The gold gleamed bright in the sunshine.
‘It is outrageous!’ Zakariya wailed as his people helped me from the carrying chair. ‘Is there no excess beyond these dogs of infidels?’ There was a splash of blood on the lower part of his tunic, and his left arm was grazed up to the elbow. But he suddenly remembered himself, and trailed off into a long mutter about how it all reflected badly on the respectable Christians who counted among his very best friends. Without troubling myself to ask, I gathered he was referring to the later massacre outside the bookseller.
I turned and looked at the inn’s heavy gate. Though shut and barred now, it couldn’t keep out the sound of renewed shouting in the streets. Zakariya saw the questioning look on my face.
‘But didn’t My Lord hear the proclamation?’ he asked with a nasty smile.
I listened with my good ear to the undoubted screams that drifted through the gap at the bottom of the gate.
‘Well, My Lord,’ Zakariya said, ‘the news is that His Highness the Governor of Syria has decreed that any more terror attacks in Beirut are to be punished with the execution of all the Greeks. Yes, men, women, children – dragged from their homes and slaughtered in the street!’ He giggled and looked heavenwards. ‘You can be sure I’ve already done my duty.’ He pointed at the blood on his tunic. ‘That Greek filth down the road won’t be undercutting me again,’ he said proudly. ‘These Greeks, I can tell you, have met their match in Governor Meekal,’ he added in the voice he normally reserved for his sermons. ‘And it’s about time they learned their place in the new Syria. Alexander’s dead. The Romans are gone. The Empire is nothing. We talk to the tax collectors in Greek, and that’s it.
‘Yes, Governor Meekal doesn’t put up with no crap. He’s just the man to drive through change – but then, My Lord will surely know all about that!’ he ended with a repeat of his nasty smile.
I ignored him and looked at Edward. I could see he’d heard the commotion outside clearer than I had. But, not knowing more than a few words of Syriac, he’d have no excuse to run upstairs for another balcony inspection of the bloodshed.
‘My Lord will forgive me, though,’ Zakariya said, pulling himself completely back into order. ‘You have a visitor. He’s been waiting in your audience room since shortly after you went out this morning.’
I nodded. I’d already seen the horse and grooms being hurried through the side entrance. I left Edward to pay off the chairmen. My stick made a slow tapping on the tiles as I went on alone towards my suite. I’d manage the stairs by myself.
The young man rose politely as I walked into the room.
‘Peace be upon you, My Lord,’ he said, bowing low. ‘I am Karim, son of Malik.’
A most well-proportioned young man – perhaps barely into his twenties – he spoke Saracen with the graceful fluency of a native. I thought quickly, trying to recall who Malik might have been. But I’d known too many of them. Still, the emblem on his gold headband told me who had sent Karim.
‘And may the blessing of our Common Father descend upon you,’ I replied in his own language. He’d stretched a point by addressing me as another of the Faithful – unless my ancient dealings with Omar were now being taken more seriously than I’d ever intended them to be. Just to be on the safe side, I’d meet him more than halfway. I sat down and rebalanced my going-out wig. I waved him back into his own chair. He smiled at me, his teeth a dazzling white against the brown of his face. He smiled – and, at the same time, was looking very oddly at me. I wondered for a moment if I’d put my wig on the wrong way again. But Edward would surely have pointed that one out to me.
‘I trust My Lord was not inconvenienced by the troubles that afflicted our streets this afternoon,’ he asked, now in a stilted Greek.
I tried to work out his position from the cut of his clothes. However, while the better class of Saracens hadn’t yet given up on their desert clothing, they were moving increasingly to the same grade of white silk and the same close fitting. I smiled my thanks for his enquiry as to my safety.
‘Not at all,’ I said, still in Saracen. ‘It was a regrettable incident that I do not look forward to witnessing again. But you may be assured of my own safety throughout.’ I fell silent as the door opened, and trays of refreshments were brought in. It was all quickly arranged, and we were alone again. I sat forward.
‘I hope you will not think it an unpardonable departure from the custom of your people,’ I said, ‘if I rely on you to pour out two cups of that deliciously hot kava juice.’
The young man smiled back at me, and reached forward for the little brass pot. I took up my own cup and sipped delicately.
‘I trust His Majestic Holiness the Caliph is well,’ I opened again. ‘I hardly need say how honoured I am to receive one so eminent among his servants.’
‘Nor we,’ came the reply, ‘to have as our guest the Great and Matchless Alaric. You will perhaps forgive the length of time it has taken us to learn of your presence. His Highness Meekal sent me over the moment he received the news.’
I smiled again. I sipped again. A shame, really, my stay here was ended. I’d just got these rooms as I wanted them to be.
Chapter 33
White and solid in the sunshine, the walls of Damascus loomed before us. I leaned forward and tapped the shoulders of the head bearer. When he turned, I motioned him to line up my chair beside Edward’s. His mouth slightly open, he was already taking in the scale of the wealth and power of this new Imperial capital. And it was an impressive sight. Apart from the obvious defence, one of the things you buy from fortification architects is that sense of awe that is in itself a form of defence. I wondered if Edward had even seen the three plumes of smoke drifting upwards from a hundred yards or so inside the gate we were approaching. Probably, he hadn’t.
‘I was last here just after the Persian collapse,’ I said, breaking a long silence that had followed a protracted round of questions about what magnificence might lie within those walls. ‘It was a sorry place back then. The Persians had thrown down its walls. They’d even carried off all the able-bodied inhabitants to repopulate their capital Ctesiphon. The only undamaged buildings amid the silent ruins of what had been an immense metropolis was the big Church of Saint John the Baptist. I spent a day here. Even without the summons to Jerusalem, that was quite sufficient for me.’
‘What happened to the Persians?’ Edward asked. ‘Where did they go?’
‘The short answer, my dear, is nowhere,’ I said. This was the end of our three-day journey from Beirut – and most interesting it had been for anyone seeking a general view of how Syria had fared under the caliphs. But I pulled myself properly back into the past. ‘On and off, we’d been at war with the Persians for centuries. Usually, we were stronger – sometimes they. But the quiet understanding was that neither side would push too hard. We both had our barbarian problems. Then, about ninety years ago, we drifted into a big war. Internal weakness – plus incompetence at the top – brought on a collapse of our defences. Before we could regroup, they’d taken Syria and Egypt and Asia Minor, and were even knocking on the gates of Constantinople.
‘At last, I got together with Sergius – he was the Greek Patriarch at the time – and we forced that useless slob Heraclius off his arse and into the field. While I handled the politics and money, and his ge
nerals did the fighting, he jogged along in front of some ridiculously small armies that shattered the Persians. We ignored trying to retake anything we’d lost. Instead, we struck deep into Persia. Everything sent against us we annihilated. We took Ctesiphon, and then stood back while the Persians fell apart in civil war. The peace we made with the winners of that civil war was quite generous, so far as we made no new territorial demands. Though we could have demanded more, all I specified was the old borders. But it was the end of our only serious threat.’ I broke off and pulled myself back into the present as Karim’s chair came suddenly alongside.
‘Am I right to assume,’ he asked in Greek, ‘that you have been telling your young companion in the Latin tongue of the glories the Caliph has directed within these walls?’ I smiled and nodded. ‘Then let it be known,’ he said, raising his voice and sitting up to look straight at Edward, ‘that this queen of cities now holds four hundred thousand people. It has twelve thousand baths. The churches of the Cross Worshippers that His Majestic Holiness, Commander of the Faithful, has allowed to be repaired are without number. The Great Mosque he has commanded to be built is already grander than anything outside the two holy cities of our homeland.’ He prosed on about what struck me – a man of the one truly great City of the world – as the decidedly provincial glories of Damascus.
Before he could run out of superlatives, though, some runtish creature in an expensive robe hurried out of the gate and over the last hundred yards of the road that led from Damascus. There was a whispered conversation. Then Karim’s brown face turned several shades darker. He opened and shut his mouth, and looked desperately round for guidance. The runtish creature whispered again, now pointing at the paved road that led round the outside of the whole city.
‘I am advised that the minor gate through which we were supposed to proceed has been deemed unfitting for My Lord’s first view of our capital,’ Karim said hurriedly. He called to the officers of the small army that had accompanied us all the way from Beirut – a most useful small army, it had turned out, bearing in mind how we’d been harried by a mostly unseen enemy – and directed them to stop their continued tramp towards the Beirut gate. With a few shouts of command and one trumpet blast, the hundred men once again formed about us, as we began our brisk journey towards some more fitting point of entrance.
‘What I was going from Damascus to attend in Jerusalem,’ I continued once we were properly on our new course, ‘was our Great Day of Triumph. There was Heraclius, seated on a golden throne within the Holy Sepulchre Church. Before him stood four of the five patriarchs – and Rome had sent out a senior bishop to stand in for the Pope. There were the leaders of various heretical Churches: even Heraclius didn’t object to a spot of tolerance on that day. There was a Persian ambassador, and representatives of Christian communities from outside the Empire. There must have been forty thousand people in the church or lining the streets. During a service that I thought would never end, Heraclius himself stood and lifted a long case covered all over in gold and set with precious stones. This contained what everyone agreed to be the remains of the True Cross. It had been found in Jerusalem three hundred years earlier by the mother of the Great Constantine. Here it had been venerated as the most holy relic of the Faith. Then, the Persians had carried it off. Now, we’d regained it, and Heraclius was formally putting it back in its rightful place. As he set hands on that golden case, and the veins in his face bulged with its weight until I thought he’d have another seizure, all four patriarchs went down on their bellies to adore its contents. They were joined by the other dignitaries. Even the Pope’s man went on his knees. It was all unbelievably grand and triumphant. You should have seen the coins we struck to commemorate the event.’
You should have seen them, indeed. Big, heavy things, they’d been; our purpose had been to show the whole world who was back in charge. But Edward was now more interested again in looking at the walls. They ran seemingly for miles in the hot sun. If they didn’t match the vast and impregnable defences with which Constantinople had anciently been endowed, they still showed what a fight it would take for a besieging army to break through. There was a time when I’d have made more than a casual note of this last fact.
I was about to drift into an explanation of how Sergius and I had used the prestige of our victory to settle the Monophysite dispute with every appearance of finality. I’d already reached into my memory and pulled out the main arguments – about the Single as opposed to the Dual Nature of Christ, and our compromise of His Single Directing Will – when we came all of a sudden on one of the capital’s external places of execution. We’d missed the morning action, but it was plain that the authorities had laid on quite a show for the onlookers. Men had been roasted alive, hanged upside down over smoking straw till they were smothered; castrated, broken with stones and scourged. There was a cluster of crosses, where the victims still feebly moved in the sun. Behind these, I could just make out the corpses of impaled men and children, their flesh being torn at by packs of yapping dogs.
I looked at Edward, wondering if he’d be cheered by a spectacle that only the civilised can manage. He swallowed and stared down at the unspoiled silk of his shoes. I shrugged. Perhaps the heat was getting to him.
At last, we came to the other gate that Karim had mentioned. This led from the desert. I shouldn’t have been, but I was surprised by the volume of traffic on that road: heavy-laden camels and other beasts of burden, wagons piled high with produce, slaves and merchants of every colour bringing goods to market. By comparison, the Beirut road had been empty. In the old days, it had been the roads up from the sea ports that carried most trade with inland cities. Roads into a desert had military uses only. But the Saracen familiarity with the desert, plus our own hold on the sea, had worked another revolution in the conditions of everyday life.
We were now passing through the main gateway into the city. Above us, in gold letters set into the granite, the one inscription anywhere to be seen said in Saracen: ‘There is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is His Prophet.’ Inside the gateway was one of the remnants of much older work that had survived the Persians. This had recesses set into it and was covered with plaques. But the statues had all been removed. So far as I could tell, the inscriptions had been cemented over or otherwise obliterated. All that was left and that I could read was a partially obscured notice of a tax remission granted by some emperor whose name was now missing. We passed into a large courtyard, surrounded by very high walls. At the far end of this was another gate that led into the city. Here, the little people who’d been going in or out had been lined up to bow down before the three chairs and all their army of guards as they went by.
I had assumed a very short pause in this holding courtyard before we went through the other gateway into the city. People of our quality are not to be delayed by local guards. But the far gate was shut, and no one seemed inclined to get it open. Now, some other commander of the gates – this one of normal size, but with a false beard – crept out through a side door into the city, and began a whispered conversation with Karim. The brown face tightened again. He gave me a long and thoughtful look. Above the gate into the city, I could see what had been three plumes of smoke now as a single rising cloud.
‘Your Magnificence will forgive us,’ said Karim with false jollity, ‘if we await the restoration of order on the city streets.’ He got down from his chair and clapped his hands. Attendants hurried out of a low building, in their hands cups of honeyed ginger cooled with snow from the mountains. I took and drank, and ignored the smell of burning that drifted from behind the far gate as often as the breeze lined up. I uttered some non-committal politeness to Karim. But he was listening again to a low and urgent commentary from the man with the false beard. It was too fast and low for me to follow. So I sipped again and dug round in the front pouch of the carrying chair for my fan. Before I could find the thing, Edward was flapping his own at me. I smiled graciously and settled back. Someone behind me arranged the cushi
ons into a more convenient softness. Karim went over to the doorway of the building to continue his conversation.
‘So what went wrong, My Lord?’ Edward asked.
I sniffed at the thin smoke that was now about us like a mist, then realised the boy hadn’t got his tenses wrong. He was still asking about the past. I tried to think of a neutral answer. But if Karim could just about make himself understood in Greek, neither he nor anyone else within hearing distance could be supposed to know a word of Latin. Though I’d keep my voice low, we were safe enough. We could discuss the Victories of the Just from whatever point of view we pleased.
‘Two days later after that triumphant celebration of world empire restored,’ I said, ‘we got a letter in comically bad Greek. It was brought to us by someone who was passing by Jerusalem with a train of camels. While we were otherwise occupied, some merchant who claimed an acquaintance with the Archangel Gabriel had unified all the Saracens under his own rule. He’d ever since been preaching them out of their less constructively barbarian ways. Now, he was inviting Heraclius, Lord of the Earth, to bow down before him. Of course, the letter went unanswered. Shortly after, the merchant died. That should have been the end of the matter. But this new faith didn’t die with its founder. His followers waited a couple of years, then burst out of their desert homes.
‘At first, we thought it was just an opportunistic raid. The Saracens had been an occasional pest for centuries. Then, after our efforts at reinforcement failed, we found that what had been taken back from the Persians was lost again for good.’
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