Read Ilario, the Stone Golem Online
Authors: Mary Gentle
If
Honorius
hears
of
this,
no
possible
concern
about
politics
will
stop
him
from
protesting!
‘Apologise.’ I could barely get the word out without stuttering. ‘Lie
and beg pardon. From Videric.’
King Rodrigo Sanguerra nodded, speaking for the first time in long
minutes. ‘Yes.’
In the city’s cathedral, in front of four, five, perhaps six thousand
people.
People
that
I
know
.
I desired more than anything to walk out. One shake of my hand, to
scatter loose and bloody fragments across the delicate wood patterns;
then I might push my way past Safrac de Aguilar and out—
But if I run through the passages of this castle, I will only meet more
people that I know.
‘You want me to claim that I lied. That I ran away. That I was too
afraid to come back and tell the truth. You want me to say this in front of
every prominent citizen and nobleman of Taraconensis.’
I found a kerchief in my leather purse. When I wrapped it about my
hand, it turned scarlet through the bleached cloth.
‘You know that if I say this in public, it doesn’t matter what the truth is
– I can’t rewrite it, after.
That’s
the story that will spread out and be believed.’
‘Yes,’ King Rodrigo Sanguerra said.
I did not look at Rekhmire’. I looked at the king who had owned me.
‘No.’
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7
Since too many eyes were watching every boat on the way out and back
to Zheng He’s great floating wooden island, His Majesty Rodrigo
Sanguerra Coverrubias changed his decree, and said that his guests
should live ashore for the time being, quietly out of the way, in an
obscure part of the palace’s south wing.
Rekhmire’’s hand clamped on my elbow the moment we passed
through the doors and were alone.
‘Ilario, listen to me!’
‘
Now
you talk to me? You should have done that before!’
I threw him off with a vicious movement, caught from the corner of
my eye how he stumbled, and swung around fast enough to catch hold of
him, preventing him falling.
Not strong enough to hold up his weight, I found the two of us taking
staggering round steps as if we danced; until the room’s wall caught me
squarely between the shoulder-blades, and both of us leaned up against
the other, gasping and panting.
I felt the taut expansion of his shoulder and arm muscles; had a
moment to think,
Walking
with
crutches
has
begun
to
alter
the
shape
of
his
body
, and then his other hand got a grip on his staff, and he pushed himself back from me and the wall.
He swayed but stayed on his feet. ‘
What
should I have spoken to you
about?’
These chambers were higher up than Honorius’s prison, I registered,
and less well-appointed. But airy and light: Onorata would be content
here.
I ignored his question. ‘I’m risking this disguise once more. Tottola
and I will bring Onorata and Carrasco ashore this evening at dusk. Is this
my chamber, or yours?’
‘They have given me the choice of rooms opposite,’ Rekhmire’ got
out, sounding as if he choked. ‘
What
have
I
not
told
you?
’
The exertion had not sapped my explosive temper: I had all I could do
to rein it in. I desired to throw anything that would break. Instead, I
faced the Egyptian, stabbing a finger towards the open windows, where
Taraco drowned in the afternoon’s white heat.
‘This is not Carthage!’ I yanked at the leather laces tying closed the
neck of Attila’s mail-shirt, but it made me no less heated. ‘This isn’t
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Rome! Or Venice! Or Alexandria! What happens to me here happens in
front of people I
know
!’
There are few ways to be got out of a mail-shirt with dignity. A
thousand riveted metal rings form a net that cling to the body. Pulling
one’s shirt off upwards only results in yanking at chin, ears, and
capturing hanks of hair to pull out.
The Egyptian was tall enough that he might have held the mail-shirt’s
shoulders still while I eased myself down out of it, but I felt absolutely no
inclination to ask his help.
I copied remembered instructions from my master-at-arms, bending
over and putting my hands flat on the floor. I shook myself until the
armour’s own weight inverted it, and brought it sliding smoothly down
over my torso, shoulders, arms and head.
The mail-shirt thudded to the floorboards at my wrists as a small
bundle of metal.
I straightened up, gasping with relief, kicked at it, and all but fell over
with dizziness.
In the voice of a man who has lost his breath again, Rekhmire’
observed, ‘A sight I wouldn’t have missed for the world . . . ’
‘
I
will
not
look
like
a
liar
and
a
coward
in
front
of
the
court
I
grew
up
in!
’
The Egyptian’s amusement vanished. ‘I would not laugh at you—’
There was a joint-stool by the couch: I kicked it the length of the
panelled chamber.
‘I will not look like a liar and a coward in front of
Videric
!’
Tottola was engaged at the outer door in conversation; I thought it
might be with members of the royal guard. I had no hope of
understanding a word with rage deafening me.
‘Ilario.’ Rekhmire’ put out his hand: I stepped back.
‘Videric made my mother try to kill me. I’ll stand in the same room
with him, but – claim this never happened? That I’ve
lied
?’
Rekhmire’ grabbed my upper arms, staring down the inch or two
difference in our heights.
‘And you didn’t plan your story well enough,’ I said bitterly. ‘Videric
allowed his
child
to be abandoned and sold! To live here at court as Rodrigo’s tame freak. How will
that
reform him in men’s eyes?’
Rekhmire’’s intent gaze made my heart hammer; I felt a pulse beating
in my throat. His mouth quirked, in something like amazement.
‘Oh . . . I can devise an answer for that, too. Say that Videric, as your
father, wanted you to have a good life at court – but he knew you would
suffer prejudice as a hermaphrodite. As the King’s possession, no man
could ever harm you.’
Rekhmire’’s expression was sardonic.
‘And if you lived anonymously, court factions could never use you to
discredit the King or your father . . . Suppose we say, on Videric’s
behalf, that coming to court as the King’s Freak is the only way you
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could have lived here as yourself? Not having to pretend to be either
wholly a man or wholly a woman.’
Rekhmire’’s fingers gradually loosened their grip.
I would have bruises, I realised absently. ‘And why was I a slave?’
‘Oh, that was
your
idea.’
I blinked.
‘When you thought of coming to court, you were afraid you’d hear too
much in royal company. You wanted to keep it confidential. If you were
King Rodrigo’s property, no man could ever ask you to bear witness
against the King or your father.’
The surface of my eyes felt dry: now I found I couldn’t blink. ‘Is there
more?’
Rekhmire’ snorted. ‘What could be more clear? Lord Videric has
always had Ilario’s best interests at heart. He wanted you safe from
gossip and conspiracy and harm – and to be able to live openly as the
hermaphrodite you are. Which you did. Until you were foolish enough to
run away from some quarrel in Carthage . . . ’
Tearing my gaze from his caused me to shake. To have such an
interpretation of the facts, and to have it be so far from the truth – and so
plausible.
I walked numbly to the window, not seeing the brightness beyond the
rippling folds of draped linen, or smelling the sea. ‘How long did it take
you to cook
this
up?’
There was an audible sigh behind me.
‘Ilario . . . I considered all aspects of the matter, from when it was
raised at home in the city, all through our journey. Men here are
ripe
for
belief. Don’t assume only soldiers and courtiers can see that Carthage
wants to send the legions in.’
Rekhmire’’s voice came closer.
‘This is an excuse and a pretext. In other words, it’s what we wanted,
to allow Aldra Videric back. Ilario’s falsely-accused and dutiful father
comes back to Taraco as First Minister. What does it matter what you
have to say?’
My breath came short. ‘It matters because he tried to kill me.’
‘This is just pride!’
I spun about, and nearly collided with Rekhmire’ directly behind me.
I glared up at him. ‘It is not
pride
. I was all but killed in childbed because of Videric.
Onorata
would have died. Videric is the man who sent my mother to kill me in Carthage, and because of him, she was
willing to do it!’
Anger’s heat stifled me more than wearing the mail-shirt. I wrenched
the laces of my doublet undone, pulled at the neck of my shirt, and sank
down on the room’s bed. My scant baggage was there: I dug in it so that
I might go barefoot and in my Alexandrine tunic again. At least until I
must return to the ship for Onorata.
251
I stopped with the linen tunic in my hands. It still smelled of Zheng
He’s ship.
‘Don’t ask me to do this. Would you let them brand
you
a liar? This would become the truth, for the rest of my life. And Honorius’s. And
Onorata’s.’ I winced. ‘
They’ll
say
Videric
is
her
grandfather
.’
The Egyptian frowned, seeming to turn inward to where that clever
mind devised infinite complicated stratagems.
‘If Onorata stays in these chambers, there’s little enough to connect
her with Videric. You’ll dress as a man, I assume? Who would think you
connected with a baby?’
That obvious, and it never occurred to me. And Honorius’s soldiers
would act as our servants, so less gossip will spread.
Rekhmire’ observed, ‘That answers the problem in the short term.’
‘You haven’t some long-term plan involving her, too? You surprise
me!’
Rekhmire’ supported himself on his stick, and lowered himself to sit
on the edge of the bed. ‘What would you have had me do?’
‘
Tell
me!
’
‘If I have considered this before . . . ’ He pulled off his headband and
rubbed at his temples. The long curve of his broad back formed a slump.
‘It was never certain this would happen. Not certain your King would
agree to it, if I suggested it. I said nothing because I would not worry you
with the matter, in case it never arose.’
Sheer disgust silenced me.
I leaped up, went to the door, spoke to Attila, and asked him to wake
me at dusk. And with that done, I cast myself down fully clothed on the
bed as if Rekhmire’ were not present, and fell unexpectedly hard into
sleep.
He did not wake me before he left for his own rooms.
Ramiro Carrasco and I endured the crossing back from ship to shore,
Onorata screaming her displeasure at the boat, the sea-spray, and the
palace apartments.
‘You owe me a debt of some sort,’ I remarked as we entered our
chambers. ‘As recompense for trying to kill me. What about an honest
answer to a question? Forget you’re my property. Tell me what you
think.’
The secretary-spy hesitated, seeming bewildered. His hand soothed
Onorata’s back. She made a little fist and rubbed it up and down the arm
of his tunic, screaming fit fading down to gulping sobs and then silence.
He made as if to offer her to me and I shook my head. ‘The way I feel
now . . . ’
She’ll scream all night if I take her.
Ramiro Carrasco smoothed Onorata’s hair back from her pink
forehead, as if it helped him to think. There were milk-stains on the
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