Read Ilario, the Stone Golem Online
Authors: Mary Gentle
Abruptly, I was silenced by the look that flashed across his face.
No
way
to
apologise
in
front
of
King
Rodrigo
without
enabling
him
to
guess
why
Honorius
would
need
an
apology.
King Rodrigo slowly nodded. ‘The Queen of the Court of Ladies? Yes
. . . There are always men willing to take beauty and ignore the
reputation that comes with it. Can you think Aldro Rosamunda honestly
possessed of such a hatred against the Alexandrine—’
I interrupted a king. ‘Can you ask me to bet Rekhmire’’s life on the
chance that she’s more greedy than she is vindictive?’
I let go of Honorius’s hands and glared at Rodrigo Sanguerra.
‘Majesty, how soon can you talk to the bishops?’
King Rodrigo blinked, caught for once wrong-footed. ‘The bishops?’
‘This ceremony – reconciliation – apology – “ceremony of peace” –
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penitence. Whatever you call it! How soon can it be arranged? How long
will it take to summon Aldra Videric and get the bishops into the
cathedral? Let’s get this started before that lunatic woman does
something to harm Rekhmire’!’
The King of Taraco looked at blankly at the Captain-General of
Leon and Castile. My father smiled.
I found my face heating. I rubbed my hands across my cheeks.
More cautiously, Honorius inquired, ‘Ilario . . . You do know what this
involves?’
‘Yes. I’m happy to eat dirt as publicly as required! Satisfied?’
A broad grin spread over Honorius’s face, despite his evident best
efforts to suppress it.
Rodrigo looked self-possessed; I couldn’t read what else might be
hiding under that efficient expression. ‘Very well. The King’s household
guard may accompany the return message to Aldra Videric – in what
strength would you suggest, Ilario?’
‘I want him protected. Well protected.’
‘Wise.’ King Rodrigo stood, dropped a curt nod at Honorius and
strode towards the door, barely waiting for us to rise. ‘I’ll send a full company. The more of the King’s Guard, the more honour, after all.’
He broke out into a smile just before the door shut on his heels.
Honorius looked at me.
He said nothing.
‘What!’ I protested.
The retired Captain-General of Castile and Leon glanced over his
shoulder at Saverico, as the men-at-arms came back into the room, and
gestured for the young ensign to bring him Onorata.
Hefting the child into his arms, Honorius murmured, ‘Taken you long
enough to realise . . . ’
Orazi smirked.
I swore. ‘I’m not – I don’t – there isn’t –
cao
!’
Honorius pulled me into an embrace gentle only because of the child
he also held.
‘Rosamunda won’t cause his death – because the damn book-buyer
isn’t stupid. Don’t worry for him. Do what you have to do, Ilario. And
I’ll stand with you, if I have to disguise myself with a sack over my head!’
I spluttered out an uncertain laugh.
‘That’s better.’ Honorius put one hand on the nape of my neck and
shook me gently. ‘I swear, in all my years as a soldier, I’ve learned how to
tell rash men and fools from the rest – and Rekhmire’ is neither.’
He paused. Smiled.
‘Your judgement isn’t so bad, son-daughter.’
There was no sensible reply to make, I thought.
268
And Honorius’s grip felt surprisingly reassuring, even if his conclu-
sions were self-evidently mistaken.
‘Let’s get this over with,’ I said.
The initial part of the ceremony took three days.
If something excruciatingly humiliating can be boring, I thought, this
is.
On the first day I knelt outside the church door as one of the
flentes
, those who weep; dressed only in a shirt, and formally asking the men and
woman who went in to Mass to pray for me, and to intercede with God
on my behalf. On the second day I was allowed into the narthex of the
cathedral as one of the
audientes
, the hearers, and knelt on the cold mosaic floor behind the catechumens until the end of the sermon – not
listening very much to what Bishop Ermanaric said, in fact, but lost in
the sensation of chill stone under my shins, and trying to work out (in the
slanting light from the ogee windows) what were the differences between
these pale stones and the glass mosaics of Venice and Constantinople.
On the third day a different bishop, Heldefredus, preached about
pardoning those who had sinned, and I took my place as one of the
genuflectentes
, kneeling between the cathedral door and the ambo, dizzy because of a whole day’s fast, and speaking only to implore the
procession of priests as they walked past me:
‘Pray for me, a sinner!’
Again, I was taken out before the Mass was celebrated.
Videric was not present. Nor Rekhmire’.
Honorius let me know himself forbidden to come, and offered his
presence all the same. I sent Orazi back with strict instructions to keep the Lion of Castile caged.
Let
this
not
cause
any
more
trouble
than
it
has
to!
King Rodrigo sent his household guard to assist in bringing me the
plain meats that the bishops had allowed in my penitential cell on the
first and second days.
Sergeant Orazi, scowling, told me each day in bad Alexandrine –
incomprehensible to the junior priests who oversaw us – that none of our
expected visitors had ridden into Taraco yet. And in the language of
Taraconensis added that Onorata was well, and possibly missing me.
Not knowing young babies, the sergeant said, he found it difficult to tell.
On the night of the first fast I didn’t see any of the guard, since no man
was to bring me food, and the bishops’ priests evidently thought
themselves capable of providing fresh water.
There was no candle or lantern in the hermit’s cell built outside, up
against the cathedral walls. I took advantage of what daylight there was
left coming through the door-grate to take the smuggled paper and chalk
out from under the thin straw palliasse.
I drew faces. Odoin, who’d been a lieutenant in Rodrigo’s royal guard
269
when I left, and now had his promotion to captain. Hunulf, and
Winguric; who had worked with me in the scriptorium, and Galindus, of
course.
I appreciated that they didn’t visit, since every other man or woman I
might know from nine years in Rodrigo’s palace crowded close to satisfy
their urge to stare at me.
The sheet of paper was not large. I drew faces in miniature. Egica,
who taught me Latin and letters at sixteen, when it became apparent that
Federico’s hired tutor had been cheap for a reason. Egica’s face was
more lined, his nose more covered in red broken veins, in this last year; I
could smell spirits on him when he stumbled past me, one hand
outstretched as if he would have ruffled my hair in passing.
More men greeted me with shuttered faces. Less than a year, and I am
ignored by those I have diced with and trained with in arms, and women-
gossips with whom I debated what colours one might put together in
embroidered tapestries . . . even young children whose parents had been
passing friendly to the King’s Freak –
The light was definitely gone.
I crumpled the paper up into a compressed ball in my hand, and
crammed it under the palliasse.
This is not the Empty Chair, or the Most Serene, or the city of the
Pharaoh in exile. This is not Carthage –
Although
I
am
under
a
penitence
of
sorts
, I found myself thinking, and smiled crookedly in the dark.
It was the kind of irony Ramiro Carrasco would have liked, when he
was a sardonic lawyer and not a slave.
They
ought
at
least
to
send
Carrasco
to
me
here,
a
time
or
two;
it
would
cheer
him
up
to
see
me
in
sackcloth
and
ashes
.
.
.
A voice outside the studded oak door of the hermit’s cell said, ‘Ilario?’
Yellow light glinted through the iron grate set into the door. An oil-
lamp or a candle; oil by the smell.
The voice was for one dumb-struck moment strange to me, and
then—
‘
Father
Felix?
’
‘May I come in? They’ve sent me to instruct you.’
‘Yes.’ I said it before I thought. ‘Yes, of course, Father!’
He had to duck almost double to get under the low lintel. The builders
had left a ledge against the far wall, where the masonry was set deep;
Father Felix put his lantern on the earthen floor with a muttered prayer,
swept his green robes around him, and seated himself. He gazed directly
at me.
He looks no different, I thought.
It only seems a decade since I left Taraco; in reality it is only ten or eleven months.
Father Felix’s copper-brown features showed as strong as ever,
270
illuminated under his hood; his astonishing pale grey eyes looked
through me as much as they ever used to.
‘The bishop wishes me to prepare you for the fourth and fifth stations
of the exomologesis.’ He leaned forward, and his fingers felt warm
against my forehead as he brushed my hair back. ‘Ilario, are you all
right?’
‘I haven’t practised fasting this year, so I’m unused to it.’ I could only
stare at him. ‘Father . . . ’
No man had ever known Father Felix’s name outside the church, or
his origins; all he would tell me was that he had travelled from beyond
the lands of the Turk, beyond the Caucasus mountains. Seeing him with
new eyes, I suddenly wondered if he would know more of Zheng He’s
land than the rest of us.
When
this
is
done,
I
will
persuade
him
to
take
word
to
Honorius,
and
bring
news
back
to
me.
‘Tertullian,’ Father Felix said, in a measured tone.
The black pupils in his grey eyes expanded in the dim lantern light.
‘Tertullian instructs us that exomologesis is the discipline which
obliges a man to prostrate and humiliate himself, so as to draw down
God’s mercy. You’ve performed three of the stations. Tomorrow, you
take your place as one of the
substrati
, as Gregory Thaumaturgus defines
it; prostrating yourself where you were kneeling today. The bishop will
lay his hand on you and bless you. The day after tomorrow, on the final
day, you’ll act as one of the
consistentes
, and be allowed to be present to
hear Mass. Then you come forward to the altar, recite a psalm and
litany, and beg forgiveness of the man you’ve wronged.’
My stomach rolled over.
Father Felix continued, ‘The King and the bishops and this man you
have offended will hold a
concilium
, there and then, to determine if you
deserve re-admission and pardon. And if so, you will be led around the
cathedral carrying a lighted candle, prayers will be said, and you will be
given public absolution. And the kiss of peace, by Aldra Videric.’
His voice altered on the last word.
‘Felix . . . ’ I sought desperately for words. For some reason
Rekhmire’’s prayer-box came into my mind’s eye: I wondered if he was
praying to Kek and Amunet and the rest of the Eight tonight, in Videric’s
provincial fortress. ‘Should I do this?’
Felix’s robes were coarse homespun wool, dyed the colour of hedge-
weeds. I suspected they were the same robes he had worn when I left last
year, faded through many washings. His dark hands were the hands of a
workman, if you looked at them apart from the rest of him.
‘If your desire for pardon is in any way not genuine, I would need to
inform the bishops.’ He held my gaze with more ease than most men.
‘Tomorrow they’ll smear wood-ash on your forehead, and dress you in