Read Ilario, the Stone Golem Online
Authors: Mary Gentle
pole into my hands.
‘What—’
‘
Quiet!
’
One of the court officers, whose face I didn’t know, scowled at the
both of us, regarding us as men-at-arms who do not know a courtly
discipline.
The officer rapped his ivory staff on the stone of the courtyard.
I stepped briskly in beside Rekhmire’ as he moved forward, just
catching the end of the herald’s full-voiced cry:
‘—of the city of New Alexandria, known commonly as Constan-
tinople!’
A flutter of women-in-waiting and courtiers stepped back as we
approached. Lesser men, according to some: mayors of distant hill-
towns, and the captains of Rodrigo Sanguerra’s frontier towers.
Certainly leaner men. I could see none of the kingdom’s more influential
and powerful lords.
Is
the
King
hiding
us
by
making
us
seem
unimportant?
A flare of hope seemed almost distant. Numb, I could only think,
But
–
Honorius!
Rekhmire’ paused before the rank of guards to either side, and for all
the chair of state was on a stone dais, he looked down at my King.
With immense dignity, Rekhmire’ began to kneel.
I saw the spasm of pain he suppressed.
Immediately I knelt, still clasping the banner pole. That put my
shoulder where he could reach it. Large fingers bit deep into my muscles,
hard enough that I thought he would still lose balance and sprawl.
The Egyptian thumped down on one knee beside me.
‘
Rekhmire’!
’ I bowed my head low enough that no man would see my
mouth. ‘My
father
! He’s alive!’
Rekhmire’ shot me a startled look – at why I sounded angry, I realised
– and had time to do no more than raise his head as King Rodrigo, fifth
of that name, looked up from his gilded chair, and leaned forward to
speak graciously.
Blood thundering in my ears cut off the formalities.
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Have you put my father in prison? Who
else
could be responsible!
The linen of the awning softened the sun’s light. More white than dark
showed now in Rodrigo’s wiry short-cut beard. His eyes, under thick
brows, might be bloodshot in the corners, but I could still feel the force
of his personality, blazing from them.
It occurred to me, belatedly. The King will be frighteningly angry that
no man apparently trusts him to hold his kingdom without Aldra Videric
at his side.
But even King Rodrigo Sanguerra knows there’s no fighting men’s
opinions. Whether they’re right or wrong.
Rekhmire’ rose, with equal effort, his weight almost pushing me down
onto the sandstone paving.
King Rodrigo signalled his guards to step back, and his servants to
pour wine; let his gaze imperceptibly stray while he continued to speak
with the representative of New Alexandria, and stopped midway through
a sentence.
‘Master Envoy . . . ’
Rekhmire’ bowed his head. ‘Ah. We thought this safer, Exalted One.’
Rodrigo Sanguerra Coverrubias stared at me.
A year ago, I thought, I could not have held your gaze so long.
‘I freed you, hermaphrodite.’
I passed Rekhmire’’s banner to Tottola and knelt down as one does
before kings. ‘Yes, Your Majesty.’
‘And then you repay me as you did. Not well.’
Biting down on rage allowed me to control my voice. ‘Is it well,
Majesty, to have put the Lion of Castile into your prison?’
At my elbow, Rekhmire’ twitched.
He
would
have
advised
me
against
that
, I thought, and momentarily regretted my anger.
No more than a moment. The world is still carmine about me.
Rodrigo Sanguerra leaned back in his gilt chair, steepling his fingers.
He gave the impression of choosing his words very carefully.
‘Tell me, Ilario, what I
should
have done with Licinus Honorius?’
He did not say ‘your father’. I had not the slightest doubt he knew.
Before I could stop choking and get out an answer, King Rodrigo
lifted the full force of his gaze to me.
‘Here is a lord of my kingdom,’ he said, measuredly, ‘Aldra Licinus
Honorius, whose presence I require at court. I send to inform him. He
does not come. I send to
order
him. He delays, says he will come . . . but
does not. Meantime, all my other lords – less rich than Licinus Honorius,
perhaps, and not “the Lion of Castile”, but still noble lords – watch this
behaviour . . . and judge how weak I’ve grown.’
No proper words of objection would form in my dry mouth.
‘Therefore,’ Rodrigo concluded, leaning back, ‘when Aldra Honorius
finally
does
deign to obey his King’s summons, what do I do? Thank him
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kindly for his arrival? Ask him how I should have worded my summons,
to be better obeyed?’
‘Your Majesty—’
‘
Yes!
’ His hand slapped loudly down on the carved chair’s arm.
‘“Majesty.” “King.” But only so long as men call me so! Licinus
Honorius is a subject of mine. He defied me. He is therefore now serving
me – by being an object lesson to any man who might think of doing
likewise!’
Rekhmire’ stirred, beside me.
It was the pain of his leg, I saw. Nothing in the Egyptian’s expression
signified dissent.
‘It’s not justice to put him in prison, Majesty!’ I spoke fiercely. ‘It’s my
fault he didn’t come. He was helping me. If you put anybody in the
dungeon, it should be me.’
Rodrigo Sanguerra briefly smiled.
‘I know.’ He rested his chin on his fist. The hooded lids of his eyes
dipped down – in a way that had always, in the past, signalled covert
amusement. ‘But my hermaphrodite Fool in prison is hardly an object
lesson to the men who covet my throne. Of which there are always
some.’
‘Sire . . . ’
Rodrigo Sanguerra waved his free hand dismissively. ‘Aldra Honorius
can stay in my dungeons until I’m satisfied every man has realised he’s
there.
And
that he submits to his King. And then, on payment of a sufficiently large fine, he can find himself at liberty.’
He frowned, his pause unstudied.
‘What, did you suppose I was going to execute the Lion of Castile?’
Dizziness made me unable to answer properly.
‘You may see him,’ King Rodrigo remarked, ‘when we’re done here.
The more visitors, the more mouths to carry the story, after all.’
He smiled at me.
‘Are you still free, hermaphrodite?’
What
a
question
. Curtailing a long story, I said, ‘Yes, Your Majesty.’
He would be in his late fifties or early sixties, this King of
Taraconensis. If I tried to look at him as a stranger would – as Rekhmire’
might be doing now – I saw the unforgiving and unwelcoming face of a
country mostly composed of mountain, infertile plain, and rocky coast.
Growing up with the land, I know there are valleys that flower at the
foothills of the mountains, and rich seas and forests, if a man can find the
way to them. Rodrigo had been rumoured a less grave man before his
Queen, Cixila, died in giving birth to their dead fourth child.
‘Come here.’ Rodrigo beckoned, and held out his hand. I moved to
kneel on the dais steps, and kissed the cabochon-cut emerald he wore in
his massive ouroboros-ring.
For a moment, he rested his hand on my head.
230
‘You come back bringing trouble, Ilario.’
A flood of emotion would have had me in tears like a girl. I waited
until it passed. And saw King Rodrigo had, as ever, read everything
visible in a man’s face.
‘We’ll break our fast and talk,’ he said, glancing around absently for
servants – and, on a sudden, looked back at me.
He gestured with his lined hand. ‘Rise, Ilario.’
Stiffly, slowly, I stood up.
It is still instinctive in me – not to rise until he gives me direct
permission.
‘The envoy of Alexandria is best qualified to speak with you, Your
Majesty.’ I prayed he did not read how rigid I stood, and how much it
was out of determination. ‘No man knows I’m here, yet; no man will
recognise me, dressed like this. May I be excused to visit Lord Honorius
in prison?’
I did not suppose Honorius would be in a prison elsewhere than in
Taraco. And not in the civil jail down in the city, reserved for men who
are not noble. Somewhere in this palace’s oubliettes and rat-infested
dungeons, thick with the stench of ancient shit and despair . . .
Because
if
King
Rodrigo
desires
to
make
an
object
lesson
out
of
Honorius,
he
will
keep
him
under
his
hand
.
Rekhmire’’s fingers closed around my biceps. Without seeming to care
that he broke protocol in speaking before the King did, he snapped, ‘We
need you here!’
The flash of Rekhmire’’s gaze prompted
Videric!
very plainly.
‘You were previously of the opinion I could stay on the ship, Master
Rekhmire’. You can bring the introductory matters to my Lord King’s
attention. I’ll continue after I’ve seen Lord Honorius—’
I bit back the words
my
father
.
‘—with His Majesty’s permission.’
Rekhmire’ glared at me, clearly divided between exasperation and a
fear that I might throw something.
Observing us, King Rodrigo shifted his chin to his other hand, all the
time watching me as closely as a painter does. He allowed silence to
return.
Rekhmire’ murmured, ‘I apologise, Exalted One.’
I echoed him. ‘I apologise, sire.’
Underlining that with silence, King Rodrigo did nothing more than
observe me from under lowered lids.
‘Very well!’ He sat up, briskly. ‘Master Egyptian, we will have a private
audience. Ilario – one hour. And you will not afterwards whine to me
that this is too brief!’
Without waiting for an answer, the King beckoned one of his men
forward; a lugubrious-faced knight in a forest-green surcoat over
Milanese armour.
231
‘The prison, first; then bring Ilario to me in the east tower, when the
hour of Terce has struck.’
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5
The knight’s lugubriosity appeared to be a function merely of his long
features. He introduced himself as Safrac de Aguilar, and smiled amiably
enough as I halted midway up a flight of sandstone spiral steps.
Four sets of steps serve the floors of the prison tower of the Sanguerra
castle. One at each corner of the building. Any one of them enough to
leave men breathless.
It was not the constriction of my ribs that made me stop, but a sudden
thought.
‘Aldra Aguilar, I have no money for a bribe!’
That we were going up, not down, the stairs, told me I was being taken
to the governor or overseer – whatever knight King Rodrigo had placed
in charge of prisoners, and who therefore kept his chambers at the top of
this high square tower. And whose income depends on what prisoners’
relatives will pay him for good treatment of a prisoner.
Appalled, I thought,
Nor
do
I
have
money
to
pay
a
jailer
for
food,
or
candles,
or
clean
water,
or
anything
my
father
will
need!
Safrac de Aguilar gave me a wry smile. ‘Your money isn’t needed.’
And
that
means?
He gave me no chance to question him, turning his back. I followed
the muffled clack of plate armour up the ever-turning stairs. His was not
a face I recalled from court life, but the King must think him honest and
not prone to gossip.
Or else he wouldn’t let the man see Honorius and I together, with
kinship written on our faces.
Unless Honorius is not recognisable—
The steps ceased, and I all but fell over de Aguilar’s heels. He opened
the door set counter-wise into the tower’s wall, and gestured for me to
pass through.