The Tale of Krispos (126 page)

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Authors: Harry Turtledove

BOOK: The Tale of Krispos
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A trooper came back to report on the fighting south of Middle Street. He didn’t seem to notice his iron pot of a helmet had been knocked sideways on his head. Saluting, he confirmed the headgear’s mute testimony: “Your Majesty, them whoresons is putting up a regular battle, they is. They’s been ready for it awhile, too, or I miss my guess.”

“Don’t tell me they’re beating the regiment,” Krispos exclaimed.
You’d better not tell me that,
he thought,
or some of my officers won’t be officers by this hour of the night tomorrow.

But the trooper shook his head. “Oh, nothing like that. They has spunk, aye, and more stay to ’em than I’d have looked for from a mob, but they ain’t got armor and they ain’t got many shields. We can hurt them a lot more than they can hurt us.”

“Tell Noetos to do what he has to do to put them down,” Krispos said. “Remind him also to make every effort to seize the priest Digenis, who I’ve heard is leading the rioters.”

“Aye, there’s a blue-robe flouncing about, shouting all sorts of daft nonsense. I figures we’d just knock him over the head.” Krispos winced; somehow rumor seemed to spread every word but the one he wanted spread. “But if you want him took alive, we’ll try and manage that.”

“There’s a reward,” Krispos said, which made the messenger hurry back toward the brawl.

Waiting was hard. Krispos would much rather have been with a fire company or the regiment of soldiers. They were actually doing something. But if he did it with them, he’d lose track of how all his forces in the city were doing, save only the one he was with. Sometimes standing back to look at the whole mosaic was better than walking right up to it and peering closely at one tile. Better, maybe, but not easier.

Without his noticing, the servitors had fetched cots from the imperial residence—or perhaps from a barracks—and set them under the awning they’d erected. Evripos dozed on one, Katakolon on another. The girl who’d come to the Amphitheater with him was gone. Krispos knew his son would sooner have been in her bed than the one he occupied, but he felt a certain amount of amused relief that Katakolon hadn’t dared leave. The boy knew better than that, by the good god.

Glancing over at Evripos, Krispos was surprised at how badly he wanted to wake him and put him to work. The lad—no, Evripos had shown himself the fair beginnings of a man—could have given him another pair of eyes, another pair of hands. But Krispos let him sleep.

Even though the fires in the plaza of Palamas were long since extinguished, Krispos smelled smoke from time to time, wafted from blazes elsewhere in the city. The wind, fortunately, had died down. With luck, it would not spread flames and embers in one of those running fires that left whole quarters bare behind them; rebuilding after one like that took years.

Krispos sat down on his cot.
Just for a few minutes,
he told himself. He dimly remembered leaning over sideways, but didn’t know he’d fallen asleep until someone yelled, “Your Majesty! Wake up, Your Majesty!”

“Wuzzat? I
am
awake,” Krispos said indignantly. But the gluey taste in his mouth and the glue that kept trying to stick his eyelids together gave him the lie. “Well, I’m awake now,” he amended. “What’s toward?”

“We’ve nailed Digenis, Your Majesty,” the messenger told him. “Had a couple of lads hurt in the doing, but he’s in our hands.”

“There’s welcome news at last, by the lord with the great and good mind,” Krispos breathed. With it, he really did come all the way awake. He must have been out for two hours or so; the buildings to the southeast were silhouetted against the first gray glow of morning twilight. When he got to his feet, twinges in the small of his back and one shoulder announced how awkwardly he’d rested. That wouldn’t have happened in his younger days, but it happened now.

“We’re bringing the bastard—begging your pardon for speaking so of a priest, Your Majesty, but he’s a right bastard if ever there was one—anyhow, we’re bringing him back here to the plaza,” the messenger said. “Where will you want him after that?”

“In the freezingest icepit of Skotos’ hell,” Krispos said, which jerked a startled laugh from the soldier who’d carried him the news. The Avtokrator thought fast. “He shouldn’t come here, anyway—too much chance of his getting loose. Head up Middle Street—he’ll be coming that way, yes?—and tell the men to haul him to the government office building there and secure him in one of the underground gaol cells. I’ll be there directly myself.”

Pausing only long enough to return the messenger’s salute, Krispos shook Katakolon awake and ordered him to fetch Zaidas to the government office building. “What? Why?” asked Katakolon, who’d slept through the messenger’s arrival. His eyes went wide when his father explained.

Haloga officers booted their men back to consciousness to guard Krispos on the way down Middle Street. With his usual quiet efficiency, Barsymes—who probably had not slept at all—started spreading word of where the Avtokrator would be so any sudden urgent word could quickly reach him.

The government office building was a granite pile of no particular loveliness. It housed bureaucrats of station insufficiently exalted to labor in the palaces, records of antiquity great enough that they were not constantly consulted, and, belowground, prisoners who rated more than a fine but less than the headsman. It looked like a fortress; in seditions past, it had served as one.

Today’s riot, though, did not lap around it. Some of the Halogai deployed at the doorway in case trouble should approach. Others accompanied Krispos into the entry hall, which was quiet and, but for their torches, dark. Krispos took the stairway down.

Noise and light and strong odors of torch smoke, stale food, and unwashed humanity greeted him on the first basement floor. The prison guards hailed him with salutes and welcoming shouts—his coming was enough out of the ordinary to make their labor seem worthwhile again.

A senior guard said, “The one you’re after, Your Majesty, they’re holding him in cell number twelve, down that hallway there.” The wine on his breath added a new note to the symphony of smells. It being the morning after Midwinter’s Day, Krispos gave no sign he noticed, but made a mental note to check whether the fellow drank on duty other days, as well.

Instead of the usual iron grillwork, cell number twelve had a stout door with a locked bar on the outside. The gaoler inserted a big brass key, twisted, and swung the bar out of the Avtokrator’s way. Flanked by a pair of Halogai, Krispos went in.

A couple of soldiers from Noetos’ regiment already stood guard over Digenis, who, wrists tied behind him and ankles bound, lay on a straw pallet that had seen better years. “Haul him to his feet,” Krispos said roughly.

The guard obeyed. Blood ran down Digenis’ face from a small scalp wound. Those always bled badly, and, being a priest, Digenis had no hair to shield his pate from a blow. He glared defiance at Krispos.

Krispos glared back. “Where’s Phostis, wretch?”

“Phos willing, he walks the gleaming path,” Digenis answered, “and I think Phos may well be willing. Your son knows truth when he hears it.”

“More than I can say for you, if you follow the Thanasiot lies,” Krispos snapped. “Now where is he?”

“I don’t know,” Digenis said. “And if I did, I’d not tell you, that’s certain.”

“What’s certain is that your head will go up on the Milestone as belonging to a proved traitor,” Krispos said. “Caught in open revolt, don’t think you’ll escape because you wear the blue robe.”

“Wealth is worth revolting against, and I don’t fear the headsman because I know the gleaming path will lead me straight to the lord with the great and good mind,” Digenis said. “But I could be as innocent as any man the temples revere as holy and still die of your malice, for the patriarch, far from being the true leader of the ecclesiastical hierarchy, is but your puppet, mouthing your impious words.”

Stripped of the venom with which he spoke them, Digenis’ words held a certain amount of truth: if Oxeites turned against Krispos, he would soon find himself out of the ecumenical patriarch’s blue boots. But none of that mattered, not here, not now. “You’re captured for no ecclesiastical offense, sirrah, but for the purely secular crimes of rebellion and treason. You’ll answer for them as any other rebel would.”

“I’ll sing hymns to Phos thanking you for freeing me from the stench-filled world that strives unceasingly to seduce and corrupt my soul,” Digenis said. “But if you do not travel the gleaming path yourself, no hymns of mine will save you. You’ll go to the ice and suffer for all eternity, lured to destruction by Skotos’ honied wiles.”

“Given a choice between sharing heaven with you and hell with Skotos, I believe I’d take Skotos,” Krispos said. “He at least does not pretend to virtues he lacks.”

Digenis hissed like a viper and spat at Krispos, whether to ward off the dark god’s name or from simple hatred, the Avtokrator could not have said. Just then Zaidas came into the cell. “Hello,” he said. “What’s all this?” He set down the carpetbag in his left hand.

“This,” Krispos said, “is the miserable excuse for a priest who sucked my son into the slimy arms of the Thanasioi. Wring what you can from the cesspit he calls a mind.”

“I shall of course make every effort, Your Majesty, but…” Zaidas’ voice trailed away. He looked doubtful, an expression Krispos was unused to seeing on his face. “I fear I’ve not had the best of luck, probing for the heretics’ secrets.”

“You gold-lovers are the heretics,” Digenis said, “casting aside true piety for the sake of profit.”

Emperor and wizard both ignored him. “Do your best,” Krispos said. He hoped Zaidas would have better fortune with Digenis than he had with other Thanasiot prisoners or with learning what sort of magic screened him away from finding Phostis. Despite the rare sorcerous tools and rarer scrolls and codices in the Sorcerers’ Collegium, the chief wizard had been unable to learn why he was unable to seek Phostis out by sorcery.

Zaidas started pulling sorcerous gear from the bag. “I’ll try the two-mirror test, Your Majesty,” he said.

Krispos wanted to hear confidence in his voice, wanted to hear him say he would have the truth out of Digenis no matter what the renegade priest did. What he heard, with ears honed by listening behind the words of thousands of petitioners, officers, and officials, was doubt. Doubt from Zaidas fed his own doubt: because magic drew so strongly from the power of belief, if Zaidas didn’t truly believe he could make Digenis speak, he’d likely fail. He’d already failed on a Thanasiot with the two-mirror test.

“What other strings do you have to your bow?” the Emperor asked. “How else can we hope to pull answers from him?” He could hear his own delicacy of phrase. He wanted Zaidas to think about alternatives, but didn’t want to demoralize the mage or suggest he’d lost faith in him…even if he had.

Zaidas said, “Should the two-mirror test fail, our strongest hope of learning truth goes with it. Oh, a decoction of henbane and other herbs, such as the healers use, might loosen this rascal’s tongue, but with it he’d spew as much gibberish as fact.”

“One way or another, he’ll spew, by the good god,” Krispos said grimly, “if not to you, then to the chap in the red leathers.”

“Torment my flesh as you will,” Digenis said. “It is but the excrement of my being; the sooner it slides down the sewer, the sooner my soul soars past the sun to be with the lord with the great and good mind.”

“Go on,” Krispos told Zaidas. Worry on his face, the wizard set up his mirrors, one in front of Digenis, the other behind him. He got a brazier going; clouds of fumigants rose in front of the mirrors, some sweet, some harsh.

But when the questioning began, not only did Digenis stand mute, so did his image in the mirror behind him. Had the spell been working as it should have, that second image would have given out truth in spite of his efforts to lie or remain silent.

Zaidas bit his lip in angry, mortified frustration. Krispos sucked in a long, furious breath. He’d had the bad feeling Digenis would remain impervious to interrogation of any sort. The vast majority of men broke under torture. Maybe the priest would, or maybe he’d spill his guts under the influence of one of Zaidas’ potions. But Krispos wasn’t willing to bet on either.

As if to rub in his determination, Digenis said, “I shall praise Phos’ holy name for every pang you inflict on me.” He began to sing a hymn at the top of his lungs.

“Oh, shut up,” Krispos said. Digenis kept on singing. Someone scratched at the door to the cell. Axe ready to strike, a Haloga pulled it open. A priest started to walk in, then drew back in alarm at the upraised axe blade. “Come on, come on,” Krispos told him. “Don’t stand there dithering—just tell me what you want.”

“May it please Your Majesty,” the priest began nervously, and Krispos braced for trouble. The blue-robe tried again: “M-may it please Your Majesty, I am Soudas, an attendant at the High Temple. The most holy ecumenical patriarch Oxeites, who was commemorating the day by celebrating a special liturgy there, directed me to come to you on hearing that the holy priest Digenis had been captured, so to speak, in arms, and bade me remind Your Majesty that ecclesiastics are under all circumstances immune from suffering bodily torment.”

“Oh, he did? Oh, they are?” Krispos glared at the priest, who looked as if he wished he could sink through the floor—though that would only have put him in a deeper level of the gaol. “Doesn’t the most holy ecumenical patriarch recall that I took the head of one of his predecessors for treason no worse than this Digenis has committed?”

“If you mentioned the fate of the formerly most holy Gnatios—may Phos grant his soul mercy—I was instructed to point out that, while capital punishment remains your province, it is a matter altogether distinct from torture.”

“Oh, it is?” Krispos made his glare fiercer still. It all but shriveled Soudas, but the priest managed a shaky nod. Krispos dropped his scowl to his red boots; could he have scowled at his own face, he would have done it. The part of him that weighed choices like a grocer weighing out lentils swung into action. Could he afford a row with the regular temple hierarchy while at the same time fighting the Thanasiot heretics? Reluctantly, he decided he could not. Growling like a dog that has reached the end of its chain and so cannot sink its teeth into a man it wants to bite, he said, “Very well, no torture. You may tell the patriarch as much. Generous of him to let me use my own executioners as I see fit.”

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