Conspiracies of Rome (44 page)

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Authors: Richard Blake

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    In token of his good faith, the pope signed his own name to the letter. In addition, he sent with it a sealed letter from the great king himself, together with one of the most holy relics of the Church and thirty pounds of gold. This would pay the first expenses of the march on Ravenna. A further three thousand pounds would be handed over once Agilulf had sealed his declaration of papal supremacy.

    The letter was dated a few days before that encounter with the bandits on the road between Populonium and Telamon. The combined attack on the Empire was proposed for the early autumn.

    The letter in Persian I couldn’t read. But what I could follow of the Greek translation said enough. Great King Chosroes had written to Agilulf, confirming the proposed deal from the pope. He swore he would so far as possible tie up all imperial forces in the East, and would open full diplomatic relations with any emperor of the West on the same basis of equality as had long existed with Constantinople. Within a mass of Oriental flattery, he hailed Agilulf as his ‘dearest brother’ and ‘Joint Eye of the World’.

43

We looked and looked at those letters.

    I looked up first. It all made perfect sense to me. The emperor was clearly unable to protect Italy from the Lombards. But he was able to keep the Lombards from the peaceful enjoyment of what they had conquered. An alliance of pope and Lombard king would give Italy its first chance of peace in forty years. Indeed, with the Greeks sent off to fuck themselves, it would return Italy to the good old days of King Theodoric – only this time without the problem of heresy that had brought his experiment in coexistence to an early end. Who in Italy could object to this?

    Lucius, I could see, objected. He was furious. I’d never seen him show the slightest concern for the common good. Now, he banged his fist on the table and was shaking with anger. ‘Those shitty clerics!’ he shouted. ‘I should have guessed they were up to something like this. They’d make a pact with the Jews – no, they’d make a pact with their devil – if they thought it would advance the interests of their Church.

    ‘You know something? When Alaric – the first Alaric, that is – was outside Rome, the pope of the day was told the city could be saved from sack by propitiating the Old Gods. Did he turn the advice down? Did he fuck! He said the ancient sacrifices could go ahead, but only if they were held in private to save his face. Because of that, Rome had its first foreign conqueror in a thousand years. Of course, there was a private deal before he was let in, and Alaric spared the churches.

    ‘These people don’t believe in anything but power! You know how they fuss on about heresy. Well, here they are, coolly offering to tolerate what they’ve always denounced as the most damnable heresy of all. So long as they get their hands on the full machinery of state, they’re perfectly happy to share it with a bunch of Arians.’ He paused and looked down again at the papal letter.

    ‘But Lucius,’ I protested, ‘this would mean no more Phocas.’

    He turned savagely to me. ‘For all we know, sitting here, Phocas is already out of power. Whatever the case, he’ll be out soon enough. If it isn’t the exarch of Africa or his relatives, it’ll be someone else. It’ll be another of my noble relatives. He’ll then set affairs right again.

    ‘Yes, I’m no lover of Phocas. That doesn’t mean I’ll stand by and watch what’s left of the Empire that my ancestors won with their blood and sweat handed over to a pack of fucking barbarians and clerics. It’s bad enough to have barbarian kings in Italy. A barbarian emperor – a barbarian emperor tied by every possible interest to the Church? Never!’

    He stood up and grabbed the letters, stuffing them back into the leather bag. ‘I’ve been thinking for a while of a trip of Ravenna. Now, I’m going there with you.

    ‘I had a message from the dispensator first thing this morning. He said he was sending men over to examine me for apostasy and blasphemy. The fucking nerve of it! Well, the next time I see him and that stinking old wreck Boniface, they’ll be shitting themselves together in Ravenna as they face charges of treason.’

    He turned to me and lowered his voice. ‘And it might have all gone to plan if you hadn’t stepped off that road outside Populonium. By now, those letters and all that went with them might now be with Agilulf.’

    I broke in again: ‘But surely, the exarch’s men were on to this in any event? We ran straight into them.’

    ‘And can you be sure they would have got there in time?’ Lucius asked. ‘Your One-Eye was well ahead of them. How do you know he’s with the Column of Phocas? What do we really know about him, other than he’s been hanging round you? Perhaps he killed Maximin. Perhaps he was up to something else that night.

    ‘No, I can see now why the Church was so desperate to get those letters from Maximin once it was known he had them. As for the Column of Phocas – as for that, you’ll need to ask Phocas himself if you want an answer.’

    ‘I don’t think it’s so uncertain as that,’ I said, speaking slowly as I gathered my thoughts.

    I’d known awhile that rendezvous outside Populonium was a big thing. I’d never imagined it involved the fate of the whole world. I knew nothing yet at first hand about high politics. One thing, however, was already plain. Little people who get involved in them see their lives changed fundamentally. Most often, their lives come to a sudden end. So it had been with Maximin. How much did I want to join him?

    ‘Maximin wasn’t killed by the Church,’ I continued. ‘All the dispensator wanted was those letters back. He could have had that from his summons to Maximin. It was the Column of Phocas that was so desperate to get the letters. Those are the people who stopped Maximin from going out. Those are the people who prevented the second summons. They called Maximin out eventually. They killed him.

    ‘Why should I give the emperor’s men what they killed Maximin to get? Why should I lift a finger against the Church that he died to protect?

    ‘I say we burn the letters,’ I insisted. ‘We now know what happened. I say we burn the letters and forget their contents, except as may be required to get the bastards who killed Maximin.’

    Lucius put the letters down in front of me. His hands shook still, but he now controlled his features. ‘They are your letters,’ he agreed. ‘You must do with them as you think best. But let me put this to you. If Maximin was really trying to protect the Church, why didn’t he burn these letters himself? At the least, why didn’t he take them off unbidden to the dispensator? He’d have had the thanks of the Church, and in all likelihood preferment. A truly faithful Son of the Church would have had his reward in the simple handing back. Why did he seal them up again and put them somewhere safe? What was he intending to do with them?

    ‘I’ll tell you why, Alaric. Maximin was trained in Rome, and ordained into the Roman Church. But he was born in Ravenna, a citizen of the emperor. You say he was troubled on that last morning? Well, that’s obviously because he felt a tug of loyalties – between pope and emperor. That’s why he became so drunk and rambling as the day wore on. He couldn’t decide where his real duty lay.

    ‘Maximin is now dead. You are at least morally his heir. You owe it to his memory to make the choice he hadn’t time to make for himself. I don’t think destroying them is an option.’

    Lucius reopened the bag and took the letters back out. He spread them in front of me. ‘Let me now put this to you. If we take these letters to the dispensator, what will he do? He might say, “Thanks very much, my lad. Stay in Rome to your heart’s content, and good luck with the investigation. Never mind the further trouble you cause me.”

    ‘Rather more likely, he’ll have the pair of us done in before we can draw breath. He’s already got a case against you. He wouldn’t have trouble getting one against me – it’s even now on his list of things to do for the day. Why should he let us get out alive? With or without those letters, we have information that could drag him straight down from that cushy eminence. I know how these clerics think. He’d watch the pair of us beheaded, and wouldn’t miss a night’s sleep over it.

    ‘One thing I do promise, though,’ Lucius said in a tone of finality. ‘Even if the dispensator doesn’t kill us, he’s in no position to tell us who killed Maximin.’

    He was right. What was it the dispensator had told me? ‘You have no conception of what I can do in this city – or of what I will do to protect the interests of the Church.’ He’d have us put out of the way, sure enough.

    The exarch of Italy, on the other hand, might now benefit from the murder of Maximin. Almost certainly, the murderers were either his own men or men on his side. But put those letters into his hands, and there was more chance of getting to the bottom of the mystery than the dispensator could provide. The exarch had no reason to kill us, nor any to refuse me – if I were to help him now – whatever private revenge against his men I might care to demand.

    Burning the letters was, indeed, not an option. It simply removed valuable evidence. I was faced with a choice: to whom should I give the letters? Pope or emperor? Exarch or dispensator? I cared little enough for any of them. If I were forced to choose, with no personal interest at stake, I’d have chosen the pope. At least his men hadn’t laid hands on Maximin – not so far as I could tell. Moreover, I’d eaten his bread, and my life mission was now connected with the success of the Church mission in England.

    But I wanted a truth that the dispensator couldn’t give me, though the exarch might.

    I replaced the letters in the bag and with a resigned sigh pushed it back to Lucius. ‘We go to Ravenna,’ I said.

    Lucius turned and pulled some papers out of a cupboard. ‘We leave today,’ he said. ‘We leave now. You’ve got enough luggage with you. I’ll get you a horse.’

    Lucius shouted for his slaves. In a moment, the house was in uproar, as they ran about filling bags with things for the journey.

 

The plan had been to send me off with a slave escort for protection on the road. Now, we were to travel light and alone. The dispensator would know almost at once what had happened. By then, however, we’d be out of Rome. By the time he could order armed guards to give chase, we’d be miles along the Flaminian Way. With our horses, and without armour to weigh us down, we’d easily outrun them, and keep ahead of any couriers sent on to intercept us. Fifty miles outside Rome, the temporal power of the Church began to fade. We could then trust in the letter of safe conduct he’d got from the exarch for his earlier journey.

    Once in Ravenna, Lucius would show the letters. That would stop the whole plan. Whatever happened in the East, Italy would be saved from the unspeakable humiliation the Church had in mind for it. And I’d be at least closer to the truth about Maximin’s death.

    As I got myself into the riding clothes Lucius gave me, I heard the clatter of horses being led out of his stable.

44

Though, like all the other great roads of Italy, it starts from the Forum, the Flaminian Way ran fairly close by the house of Lucius. Because it is the main road to Ravenna, it was kept clear and in good order. We had to dismount a few times as we hurried down the side streets that led onto it. Once on the road, however, we were very soon at the Flaminian Gate. No message had reached the guards there, and we passed through unhindered. I didn’t suppose even the dispensator could act that fast. Nevertheless, it was as if a weight had fallen from me as we passed through the heavy gate, the guards standing to attention for the lord Basilius.

    Once out, we set a steady gallop. As we reached the great Milvian Bridge over the Tiber – the place where Constantine is said to have had the message from God that converted him – I looked back. I could see the high walls of the city, but as yet no pursuit. Within the walls, I could see the tops of the higher buildings.

    I’d stopped noticing how bad the air was in Rome, or how built up the place was, even if much of it was ruined. Outside the walls, it was almost a shock to breathe clean air again, and to have an unbroken view all around me.

    As before, the road was raised above the surrounding countryside, running straight and white into the distance. On our left was the Tiber, sliding further away from us as we travelled north; on our right the ruins of a civil order that had once reached far outside Rome.

    Unlike on the Aurelian Way, we weren’t alone. There was a thin but continuous stream of traffic: wagons laden with food and other goods for the Roman market, pilgrims coming in for the consecration or just to worship in the existing churches, the carriages and litters of the great. We passed a convoy of imperial couriers, bringing letters from the exarch. Covered in dust from the long journey, they now rode slowly, laughing and chatting. They called out a greeting as we passed them.

    I looked back after a few miles. I shaded my eyes and squinted to see past the sun, which had risen high on my front left. My heart skipped a beat. There was a little cloud of dust in the south. The dispensator had at last got wind of our intentions, and had sent out a whole mounted brigade to ride us down. Another chase on a road. How would this one end?

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