‘Perhaps I do see the reason,’ I said with an attempt at a weariness I wasn’t for the moment feeling. ‘The problem is that I am but an old man. My best work is all behind me.’ I would have said more. But Khadija was smiling again. She waited while I finished playing with my teeth.
‘If it is the blond boy,’ she said, now very gently, ‘we can arrange guarantees that Meekal himself would not dare break.’
I took off my wig and scratched the crown of my head. It gave me time, and diverted attention from my face, while I thought about that one. It needn’t have been a surprise that she too didn’t believe the story about Callinicus. How she knew about the threat to Edward raised a number of possibilities – all of them interesting and perhaps useful.
‘And I do appreciate the regard you pay to family matters.’ She paused and gave me another slow look. ‘I am told you have no posterity now within the Empire,’ she said.
I couldn’t keep my eyebrows from arching just a fraction of an inch. All that chatter of families, and she’d known my situation pretty well. Doubtless, I’d fathered bastards throughout the known world. But, aside from my son the Bishop – who was too pious to break his vows – all I had left that was certainly of my own blood was Karim. But I wrinkled my nose and smiled.
‘Karim is a fine boy,’ she said. ‘And he thinks himself all the better for being yours. I have said that this family matter has been kept within the family. To be sure, it is not something anyone has brought to Meekal’s notice. Even today, he prides himself on the adoptive connection.’ She paused again.
Fucking old bitch! I thought. She hadn’t entirely got there yet, but she was well on the way. And she was starting – in her ever so delicate Eastern way – with a threat: help reproduce the Greek fire, and see Edward and Karim outlive me; refuse, and see my blood spilled from two bodies, and kiss goodbye to Edward. I resisted the temptation to say bluntly what I felt – after all, there was more coming yet from her – and smiled again.
‘But Khadija, my dearest kinswoman,’ I purred, ‘I appreciate your sense of religious destiny. I will certainly not argue with it. However, what you are asking surely increases the standing that Meekal has with the Caliph and in his councils. And let us be plain – for all you desire a final victory over the Empire, do you really want it today? And do you want it in the manner in which it is most likely to happen?’ Her face went a darker shade as I spoke. That was the implication of all she’d been saying. Even so, I was breaking the rules of our conversation, and she had to work hard on that composure. ‘Oh, come now,’ I went on, ‘let us agree that Meekal’s idea of co-opting the Greeks and ruling the combined Empire from Constantinople is a sound one. But where would it leave the old families? Most of you still have your hearts in Medina. You live in Damascus only because that’s where Muawiya decided to have his capital. You feel lost among the arts and luxury of the Syrians – and they, let me tell you, have always been regarded by the Greeks as a decidedly inferior race. Move the capital to Constantinople, and you certainly will spread your faith over parts of the world currently beyond your reach. But will it any more be your faith?’
I had just trampled like a battlefield elephant over all the diplomatic courtesies, and Khadija sat awhile in silence, her face politely frozen. Then, unexpectedly, she laughed. She pushed her chair back and reached up to scratch her head.
‘Dearest Alaric,’ she said at last, ‘we do understand each other so very well.’ I smiled and took another of her drugged biscuits. ‘I will come directly to the point. We want the Greek fire, and I will promise and do whatever is needed to get you to work on supplying it. At the same time, I shall be grateful if you could ensure no breakthrough in Meekal’s project until such time as the Caliph and all his Council are back in Damascus from the civil war. Above all, it would not be in the interests of the True Faith for Meekal to have the secret entirely to himself. It is our intention to conquer the remaining territories of the Empire – but not within the time that Meekal has in mind, and certainly not for the purpose that he has in mind. We cannot wait too long. But we can wait a little longer. Given our destiny, we have no need to strike while the walls of Constantinople are being repaired.’
I took my teeth out again and made proper work of the biscuit. I followed this with another of the figs. For the first time that day, I’d found myself with a reasonable incentive to call Meekal back into my presence and grant his request for my help. And I could look forward to the sight of his face when, on final completion of his project, it was handed straight over to Admiral Abbas or someone else who hated his guts.
There was another knock on the door. The green eunuch came in with a second slip of parchment. Khadija’s face hardened again. Her mouth opened as if for some impatient comment. Instead, she nodded. The eunuch went back out. She turned to me, her face arranged into a smile that was almost charming. No one dismisses Alaric: he takes his leave. I pushed my teeth back in and gripped the table so that it shook. I stood up.
‘My dear friend,’ I said with as much ivory as I could show, ‘this has been a most interesting conversation. But the hour is late, and I am, I must repeat, an old man. You will forgive me if I take my leave of your delightful company.’ I looked again at the wall behind her. It wasn’t a trick of the light. The tapestry that hung from ceiling to floor was swaying in some very gentle breeze. There might be a window open behind this. More likely, we were in a curtained-off area of a larger room. Behind that heavy silk, who could tell what secretaries were taking careful notes of all we’d discussed?
Beginning her own spray of gracious comments, Khadija took my arm as I walked back to the door, and made sure to give me into the hands of her green eunuch.
‘Remember, Alaric,’ she said, still inside the room, ‘God has appointed all of us to work to a certain fate. Yours is to ensure that, even in Rome, the Faithful shall be called to prayer. We shall be victorious all over the world, and remodel it according to the will of God. It is your destiny to sweep aside the last barrier to our victory. The life of no one individual can be suffered to stand in its way.’ Her eyes shone with holiness – or perhaps with whatever drug we’d been taking. ‘God wills it,’ she added. ‘God wills it.’
‘Though God may not will it for those who presently think it their right,’ I said drily.
She suppressed a smile as, with little squeaks and much fluttering of hands, the eunuch led me back towards my chair.
Chapter 49
For a man of my age, and in my situation, you will surely agree, my most sensible course of action involved bed until noon the following day, or such time as Meekal presented himself again. But, with those stimulants roaring away in my head, I wasn’t feeling that sensible. And there had been something curious about the shadowy creature who was doing so much to stay out of my sight as I emerged back into the palace grounds. It had been a brief motion of greater darkness within the shadows on my left – that, plus some furtive looking about by the eunuch. But that would have been enough for Alaric in his prime. And it was enough for Alaric now.
I waited until we’d gone round the wall of a neighbouring building. I reached forward with my stick and tapped the shoulder of the head carrier.
‘Stop here,’ I said. I let another of the carriers help me down from the chair and walked up and down on the grass. Though sweating in the cool breeze of the night, I felt decidedly jaunty. I pointed at the tallest of the carriers. ‘Take off your outer garments,’ I said. I laughed softly at his look of confusion. I reached into the front compartment of the chair and took out my purse. I opened it and produced enough gold to buy all their freedom twice over. ‘Help me into your clothes,’ I commanded, ‘and keep yourselves out of sight under those trees.’ I went over to the chair and dumped my blond wig on the seat. Off came my visor, and then the eyebrows shaped from the lightest mouse hide. Out came my teeth. Now came off the artful mingling of white and red paint from my face, and finally the shaped leather jerkin that gave the appearance
of muscle to my upper body. When put on me, the general slave livery of the palace hung from a thin, shrivelled body none but those who knew him well would ever have associated with the Magnificent Alaric. I thought about my stick. But, even damaged, it wouldn’t have given the impression I needed. I could probably do without the thing for a while.
‘Keep an eye on that gate over there,’ I said firmly. ‘Be ready to snatch me for a quick getaway.’ The head carrier nodded nervously. I could probably trust them. In any event, I was committed to trusting them.
I walked with moderate briskness into the main hall of Khadija’s apartments. I had a sheet of papyrus in my hands, and what I hoped was a credible story. But I was now a bald, drooling old creature. No one pays attention to that sort of slave when he looks to be about his business. The two guards sitting just inside the hall gave me the inspection you give to a falling leaf and went back to their conversation. I walked towards the latticed door. As I’d expected, there was one of the slave girls sitting in the antechamber. Evidently bored and half asleep, she looked up at me. I waved my papyrus at her and nodded at the other of the two far doors. She slumped back in her chair and paid no further attention.
I’d expected a larger room. In fact, it was little more than a cupboard. But I was right in my general surmise. This was divided from Khadija’s sitting room by a curtain, and there was a table and chair next to the curtain, for notes to be taken of her conversations. Since the room was empty, I had no need of the story I’d been turning over in my head. There was a lamp in a bracket attached to the wall. Either this was turned right down, or it was running out of oil. Whatever the case, its flame waved feebly in the breeze from the shuttered windows. There was a stack of clean papyrus on the table. One of these was covered in writing that I was in no position to try reading. I took up the pens one after the other. They were all dry. The conversation I’d just had with Khadija was obviously one that she preferred to keep in her own mind. No sound of conversation came through the curtain. I thought to risk pulling the curtain a few inches where it brushed the far wall of the room. As I reached out, though, to take the silk hem between forefinger and thumb, I heard the door open from Khadija’s main quarters.
‘Your impatience for a meeting does not suit my convenience,’ she said coldly.
I dropped my hand. I was glad I’d crept into this room, and that the door had one of those locks that doesn’t make any sound. I looked at the chair. But moving it would probably make a noise. I held my breath and sat myself slowly down on the carpeted floor. I pushed my good ear as close as I dared against the curtain and concentrated hard. If anyone came into this room, I was already in what might pass for a sleeping position. It was a risk I’d need to take.
‘I watched as his chair was carried off into the night,’ I heard Joseph say. I smiled complacently at the sound of his voice, and it was only luck that I didn’t brush against the curtain with my instinctive self-hug. He might have followed me to Jarrow and then to Africa and now to Damascus. He might – surely, must – nowadays be the brightest and best of the Intelligence Bureau. But no one gets much past old Alaric. One look in his direction, and I’d seen him skulking in those shadows. He was now speaking Saracen fluently and without any noticeable accent. They spoke briefly about matters that were of no relevance to me. Then Joseph asked abruptly, ‘So, what did you think of him?’
‘He’s an old man,’ she said. ‘He’s completely broken down by age, and the veins on his nose indicate much indulgence in the wine of the infidels. I’d never have supposed from looking at him how hard it’s been to kill him.’
Joseph’s response was somewhere between a laugh and an unpleasant growl.
‘I can’t say your people have been trying to much effect,’ he jeered softly. ‘They tracked him down well enough to his place of confinement. I understand they got their agent in place around the same time as Meekal got his. Your agent, though, seems to have done his job with singular incompetence. Alaric thought he was safe in Britain – safe beyond all civilised reach. It should have been easiness itself to kill him while he slept. Engaging the same race of northerners as Meekal had, and expecting them to be let into the monastery was unnecessarily complex. Whatever happened there, your agent failed miserably. Meekal’s plan was rather more successful, and so Alaric was brought back into our world.’
‘And, once you’d discovered he was back,’ Khadija broke in defensively, ‘I don’t see that the Empire’s own efforts were crowned with greater success. I’ve had a full report of what happened last night. Your people never so much as saw him once he was out of the banqueting hall.’
‘That is unfortunate,’ came the mocking reply. ‘Our problem, however, was catching up with him. Meekal commissioned a ship that was too fast for our own ships of that weight. Last night, he had Karim to lead him to safety. You, my dear Khadija, had him locked in his own rooms. He still dispatched your best agent – and, if I hear right, with his walking stick!’
The conversation fell apart in mutual recriminations that were enjoyable to hear, but aren’t worth reporting. That Hrothgar had been working for Meekal was old news – I could barely recall when the first suspicion had crawled into my mind. But it was definitely news that Cuthbert had been working for a different interest group among the Saracens. I should have guessed this from what Khadija had already told me. Perhaps, had I gone straight back to bed, it would have come to me. But it was useful to have the information directly, and with no reasonable doubt of its truth. I wondered if Cuthbert had known whom he was serving. If he had, he’d have been shitting on the Faith for a pittance. It really would have been interesting to get that document pouch open. It went to show that you should never pass up the opportunity to read another’s correspondence. But I filed all this away for some future use. It had none at present. More useful was to know it had been Khadija and her friends behind the murder attempt of the night before last. That explained the assassin’s knowledge of all relevant details. It also explained why the real Angels of the Lord had omitted the attempt from their own list of failures.
‘But, unless you managed to poison him earlier this evening,’ Joseph started again, ‘I see you’ve given up on your plan of murder. Does that mean you think you’ve made a deal with him?’ I think Khadija nodded in the resulting silence. Joseph laughed again. ‘You really do think you’ve made a deal with him,’ he said in a tone of mild contempt. ‘I suppose the deal is that he helps Meekal turn that money pit of his into a knock-out weapon against us. He then helps you stitch up Meekal so the weapon belongs to you and your friends. You can then escape this gentle prison among those you despise, and your friends can take back control of this Empire from those who want to provide it with stability and permanency.’ Joseph was no fool. I hadn’t trained him. But I could take pride that I’d probably recruited his trainers.
‘Come, My dear Lady,’ he prompted, ‘isn’t that what you think you’ve done?’
‘And what would be so wrong about that?’ Khadija asked sharply. ‘Would that not also be in Caesar’s interests?’
‘It might,’ said Joseph. ‘But I would remind you of our earlier agreement – so much more welcome to the Emperor – that we should, at the earliest opportunity, help Alaric into the next world. None of us wishes Meekal to have in his own possession the most devastating weapon ever developed. But we do not wish any of the Saracens to have this. We may have little belief in the ability of anyone but Meekal to use it to proper effect. But a weapon of that nature is not to be trusted in any hands but our own. Let me ask, though, what reason you have to suppose Alaric will turn on Meekal.’
‘Because,’ Khadija replied, ‘he has an adopted son whom only we can protect.’
That set Joseph off into another of his sneering laughs. And I had trouble not joining in with laughter of my own. This was glorious stuff. I hadn’t spied with so much enjoyment since – court intrigues, of course, don’t count – since I’d overheard a Lombard king versifying his next sieg
e of Rome. Here was every apparently ill-fitting piece of the puzzle pushed into place. And here were two people subtly lying to each other in the hearing of someone who could recognise every lie and every suppression of the truth. It was better than a play.
‘I do assure you, My Lady,’ Joseph said when he’d given up on laughter, ‘that the boy is of no value. According to my reports, he is a vicious, unintelligent creature. I have seen him myself, masturbating at some public spectacle of the obscene. If you think he can be used as a hostage to force anything out of a man like Alaric, you will be disappointed.’
‘My own reports tell me otherwise,’ Khadija said quietly. ‘Let me assure you that we shall, within the next five years, reorganise your Bureau in Constantinople. Would you like to be its Director?’
More laughter – this time polite. ‘And if he does give you the weapon on which you pin all your hopes of conquest, do you suppose it will be sufficient? Even without Alaric, our own programme has moved on. Greek fire, as he gave it to us, was always a variety of different weapons. We have now developed some of these in directions that would surprise him. What he developed could burn on water. What we have now can be ignited by water. You will not have heard, I am sure, of the victory we gained early last year over a race of yellow men on horseback. They raided deep into Thrace and refused all bribes to withdraw. And so we led them across a field strewn with cloth bags of our latest weapon, and waited for the rain to fall. When it was safe for us to approach, we counted twenty-five thousand charred corpses. Do not imagine that, in the development of weapons, you can ever match the advantage we have gained to compensate for our weakness in numbers.’
The Sword of Damascus a-4 Page 32