Read Ilario, the Stone Golem Online
Authors: Mary Gentle
The rail almost imperceptibly shivered under my hand. Deep waters
darkened under our prow.
Honorius stood beside me, his hands clasped behind his back. On my
other side, Rekhmire’ wore Onorata’s sling, and held her cautiously,
gazing with a puzzled look into her tiny and messy features – possibly
trying to deduce if she indeed recognised him.
I whipped out a kerchief to wipe her nose, and spent some time
pointing out to my child the chief landmarks of Taraconensis as we left
them behind, and naming the different parts of the war-junk in Chin.
‘Ilario . . . ’ Rekhmire’ removed his hand from under the sling,
examined it, and put it back. ‘She’s five months old!’
‘It’s never too early to start . . . ’
Honorius choked off a laugh, and stepped aside to confer with Orazi. I
knew more than half of the men-at-arms he had chosen to accompany
the Captain-General of Taraconensis to Carthage: acquainted with them
from Venice and Rome. The others were veterans of having His
Majesty’s royal guard garrisoned on Honorius’s estate; the evenings were
rife with exaggerated tales, each trying to out-do the other.
‘Ilario.’ Rekhmire’’s eyes slitted against the brilliance. He stepped out
of the way of two of Jian’s sailors sprinting past. ‘Do you see something?
There, ahead?’
295
I looked into the shining mist of the horizon, and rubbed my dazzled
eyes. ‘Not a damn thing!’
I had not yet got over the relief of seeing Rekhmire’ returned safe from
Videric’s estates. I would have said this to him, if not for the fact that he
hardly ever spoke to me now.
He
says
more
to
Onorata
.
.
.
I checked the ties on her tiny hood, and she yawned in my face.
‘Charming child!’
Rekhmire’ gave me a look of the greatest apparent innocence. ‘Should
I risk saying I know how she feels?’
‘Not unless you want your shins kicked! Except that I suppose I can’t
while you have her – is that why you volunteered to carry the baby sling?’
The Egyptian made an unsuccessful attempt at appearing wounded.
‘I should be wary of complaining about boredom,’ he added, seeing
me failing to be moved. ‘That usually serves to call up sea-serpents and
comets and acts of the gods . . . ’
‘I can do without any of those!’
I found I must step back out of another running man’s way—
Jian himself.
‘What . . . ?’ Squinting after the Chin commander, I found myself
looking south, into sun and brilliant mist – and dark protuberances that
could not be the Balearic Islands.
Not
unless
we’ve
sailed
infinitely
faster
than
I
thought
we
could!
Rekhmire’ closed both his large hands protectively around Onorata.
Honorius appeared at the rail again, beside me. ‘What is it?’
‘I don’t know. There are no reefs—’
I saw Carrasco come up from below, talking quite companionably with
Berenguer and Tottola. The German man-at-arms suddenly seized
Ramiro Carrasco’s shoulder and pointed forward.
I turned and leaned forward over the rail, as if straining those few
inches further forward would let me see what Tottola saw. Honorius’s
fingers clenched over the back of my belt.
The dark protuberances resolved a very little more out of the haze.
‘Not islands . . . ’ I whispered.
Rekhmire’ choked out an obscene oath.
Honorius said, ‘Ships.’
My father’s eyes narrowed as he stared into the bright south. I felt the
harsh luminosity bring tears running out of my own eyes.
But I see masts, stacked masts, narrow and impossibly high . . .
Zheng He’s war-junk actually
leaned
. Every sail set, I saw, craning back to look overhead.
Feet thundered; I heard orders screamed at high pitch; the bows slowly
tacked across.
‘Two. Five. Eight. Ten.’ Rekhmire’ clasped my daughter against him
296
with one hand and shaded his eyes with the other. ‘Captain-General.
How is my count?’
Honorius gazed south with eyes that have been too long used to
looking into hostile distance. He mouthed numbers. I blinked, and
looked back.
I
will
never
paint
that
fire
and
light!
I thought. The delicacy of water-drops with light shattered through them into colour, white foam at the
foot of the prows—They swelled into existence on the morning sea,
appearing out of the haze, unmistakable in their silhouette.
More than ten. More than twenty. More than fifty.
A signal rocket soared up and broke apart with a piercing shriek.
‘What,’ Honorius said carefully, his gaze on the southern waters, ‘are
those?’
My neck felt cramped and cold in the stiff wind. I couldn’t stop
staring. ‘I think – that’s the Admiral’s lost fleet.’
The nearest one was close enough that I could see a green dragon-face
painted on the flat prow.
Raising his voice over the shouting, and banging of signal rockets,
Honorius protested, ‘There can’t be two hundred of them!’
I reached out my arms as Rekhmire’ slid the sling’s straps around me,
and I cuddled my screaming child into my shoulder, putting hands over
her ears against the noise.
‘Of course there can’t be two hundred! Who has two hundred ships
like this? Half of them must be a mirage!’
Two Chin crewmen all but knocked me flying; I let Rekhmire’ use his
solid large body, and his stick, to shelter me across to the companionway.
Ramiro Carrasco climbed down in front of me, sheltering me all the
way to the cabins.
A quarter of an hour later, when the noise was very nearly as loud in
the cabin as it was outside, Rekhmire’ limped in through the door.
‘Not two hundred.’
‘I knew it!’ I made the final fold of cloth and picked Onorata up, her
clouts changed for fresh cloth. ‘I knew there couldn’t be two hundred.
How many are there?’
Rekhmire’ sat down hard on a carved chair.
‘One hundred and eighty-three.’
297
13
An uncomfortable four hours passed.
From the main deck, I witnessed men, obviously the captains of their
war-junks, rowed to Zheng He’s flagship. The sound of celebratory
drums and conches made my ears numb.
The Armenian sergeant, Orazi, gave voice to every man’s fear.
Shooting a suspicious glance at the Admiral’s cabin, he demanded,
‘Where’s the bastard going to take this fleet
now
?’
At the end of several hours the captains were rowed back; the towering
ships set their sails, and began the long process of tacking for a wind.
Rekhmire’ yanked with fingers and teeth at a strip of leather, which I
saw he had tied round and over the ferrule of one of his crutches, for a
better grip on the deck. He moved his mouth, as if at the taste.
‘I dare not calculate the number of men Zheng He has here,’ he
observed. ‘I will, however, see what course we’re on . . . ’
He stayed absent long enough for Honorius to entertain himself in
speculating which kingdoms of the Middle Sea the Chin Admiral might
now invade and conquer, if he so desired.
When Rekhmire’ returned, he merely shrugged at us.
‘By the compass, our course is set
sirocco
levante
.’
Even recalling Onorata’s lullaby, I looked momentarily blank.
‘East south-east,’ Rekhmire’ said. ‘And since compasses don’t lie, I
judge us to be on the course that will take us past the Balearic Islands and
Sardinia, to Carthage. It appears the Admiral is a man of his word.’
The Chin rockets appeared much brighter under the Penitence, in
Carthage’s harbour. Soaring up in arcs, bursting in showers and
fountains, they dimmed the aurora’s curtains of light.
Down in the lower stern cabins, with only the small window-ports
unshuttered for air, I found the drums and gongs and cymbals muted.
But not by much. Even small round drums, wider than they are tall,
shake the air when thousands of men sling them at their waists and beat
them with hands and sticks.
Onorata lay on her back asleep, but only because she had screamed
herself into exhaustion.
Somewhat sourly, Rekhmire’ muttered, ‘Zheng He won’t be talking to
298
King-Caliph Ammianus for some time yet – since the man’s likely stone-
deaf!’
Honorius stuck his head out of the small port, gazing down the hull –
so much larger than any other vessel in Carthage’s port. His voice came
back muffled. ‘If Zheng He was a normal man, he’d be dead drunk!’
I took my father’s point. More of the Admiral’s junior captains had
flocked aboard the war-junk. Two in particular appeared his friends:
they called him ‘Ma’ instead of ‘Zheng He’, and I saw much male back-
thumping and extremely rapid speech going on, before the general noise
forced me to retire below.
Rekhmire’ rubbed at his knee-joint. ‘Apparently their religion doesn’t
allow drunkenness.’
He glanced away as I caught his eye.
The
Egyptian
is
nervous.
Perhaps Ty-ameny’s briefing for what he must say to the King-Caliph
Ammianus?
Honorius, pulling on his furred demi-gown, spoke a little apologet-
ically. ‘I’d take you with me to the King-Caliph’s audience if I could,
Ilario.’
Does
he
read
my
mind?
I couldn’t help but smile.
‘As far as I can tell,’ I said, stroking at the soft curls sweat-stuck to Onorata’s ear, ‘there’s you, Admiral Black-Eyes, and the book-buyer
here, all going up the Bursa-hill to tell the King-Caliph the same thing.
“Look at those ships down in the harbour – now keep your nose clean!”’
Honorius chuckled.
‘I’d like to see your performance,’ I said. ‘But King Rodrigo would
skin me if I don’t keep my face away from your company in public.’
My father held his arms out while Saverico buttoned the pleated demi-
gown and arranged his flower-and-serpent-stamped leather belt. Chin
awkwardly up as his collar was straightened, Honorius spoke loud
enough to be heard over the drums.
‘If you go into Carthage, take my men. If you don’t need to go, stay on
board.’
The din of drums and conches did not die down. I thought it would
not until Zheng He and his officers and captains had made their way up
to the King-Caliph’s palace. And perhaps not even then.
I caught Rekhmire’ watching me.
I said, ‘I intend to send Ramiro Carrasco out, to find a rooming-
house.’
I saw illumination dawn on Honorius’s face that was not from the
Chin fireworks.
‘Even if it’s only the once,’ I finished, ‘I want Onorata to meet her
father.’
*
Honorius and Rekhmire’ accompanied the Admiral up to the Bursa-hill
numerous times over the next few days.
I claimed I would wait until they had space in their political business to
accompany me to Marcomir’s house.
Truthfully, my guts crawled with chills.
Honorius spent thirty years wanting a child he couldn’t have. He
would have loved anything, I sometimes think. And if he had been
shocked by the idea of having an hermaphrodite offspring, he did all his
thinking about that between Taraco and Carthage, before he ever met
me.
Marcomir,
though
. . .
Marcomir never struck me as wanting children.
Brief as our acquaintance was.
‘Ready?’ Rekhmire’ questioned.
He wore a simple white tunic, for much the same reason that Honorius
– with sighs of relief – was allowing Saverico to buckle him into a blue velvet-fronted brigandine. A book-buyer and a soldier would pass
unnoticed in Carthage’s streets.
Especially with the city full of Chin strangers, to be studied, and stolen
from, and seduced.
I checked, for the fourth or fifth time, that nothing essential was being
left in the ship’s cabin. That Onorata’s clothing was clean, and her sling
buckled firmly over my shoulders.
To Honorius, but with an eye on Rekhmire’, I said, ‘We should bring
Ramiro Carrasco.’
Carrasco’s expression was unexpectedly optimistic. Before either man