Read Ilario, the Stone Golem Online
Authors: Mary Gentle
The sun stood further down the sky. The tide smelled of weed. Jian
cleared the audience and I stood up, brushing fruitlessly at the chalk and
charcoal that marked the front of my linen robe, and handed the latest
sketch off to the remaining Chin sailor. He bowed, repetitively, and ran
off. He might have been holding the paper upside down – I wasn’t sure if
these people could see, in any real sense, how I put things down on
paper, but their desire for a souvenir from the mad foreign slave
evidently overcame their lack of understanding.
‘Are we leaving?’ Buckling my leather case, and slinging it over my
shoulder, I glanced hurriedly around.
Even if not allowed back on board, I have enough to keep the
Pharaoh-Queen’s philosophers happy. But – there is so much more—!
‘For the moment, we leave.’ Rekhmire’ beckoned his clerks, and
swung himself on his crutch with the appearance of calm, towards the
side of the great ship.
Falling back on the Iberian no man would understand but us, I asked,
‘Did you find out why they’re here? Are they a threat? Did the Admiral
tell you what they want here?’
The Egyptian reached out and rested his arm across my shoulders,
letting me take a substantial amount of his weight. I was momentarily
startled. Clearly he found this physically wearing.
But to Jian, it will hardly hurt to have us appear master and slave
again. And that is how he will take this.
Rekhmire’ gave me a brief smile all friendship and relief. I concluded
myself not the only one glad to be leaving. He reached for the ropes of
the cradle in which, it was evident, they intended to lower us to our own
vessel.
Looking over the heads of the Chin sailors, he murmured, ‘I
can
tell you why this ship is here in Alexandria.’
‘You can?’
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I let them tie us in to the leather sling like luggage, closing my eyes against the distance from deck to sea.
Rekhmire’’s voice spoke Iberian in my darkness, as the ropes jolted
and lifted.
‘The Admiral was clear enough about that. Although other things are
less clear. But I think I believe him as regards this. This ship is here, in
this port – because they are lost.’
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12
‘Lost?’
The Pharaoh-Queen Ty-ameny gave Rekhmire’ a look that could have
melted Venetian glass, never mind smashed it.
My drawings lay spread out over the pink marble tiles of this one of
her private chambers. She had questioned me extensively about each
sketch. And now, when Rekhmire’ answered her question . . .
‘Lost,’ she repeated flatly.
‘Yes. And seeking a route back to this empire of theirs,’ Rekhmire’ said
equably. ‘Which, as far as I can make out, is called “Chin”. Thousands
of leagues to the east. Past Tana—’
That name was one I recognised, having often heard the Venetians
mention it: a port in the north-eastern part of the Black Sea.
‘—at the end of wherever the Silk Road goes.’
I think Ty-ameny and I stared at him with precisely the same
expression.
‘As for why they’re here . . . They became lost during a storm; I’m
uncertain where. But they can at least navigate well enough to sail
towards the sunrise, and sailing east has finally brought them to
Alexandria. It’s clear to them that there’s more sea beyond here.’
Rekhmire’’s nod indicated the vast window, and the eastern horizon
beyond the Golden Horn. ‘They think they can sail to Chin on the Black
Sea waters. They have no idea that it’s a closed sea. And that there’s
nothing but land beyond the easternmost Turkish ports.’
‘And you . . . ’
‘I have said nothing of that, as yet.’
It would be strange, I thought, to have no idea of what the Middle Sea
looks like.
True, no two charts I’d ever seen in a shop had ever got the shape of
the lands the same – or put them in quite the same place, come to that –
but the names of ports, the number of leagues and days’ sailing between
them, the knowledge of rocks and reefs and pirates . . . All these were, if
not precisely known, still capable of making a shape in my mind’s eye.
I imagined Zheng He and his great ship creeping along from headland
to headland, as the trireme had, but with no pilot. Sometimes lost out of
sight of land . . . losing his course if a storm made his lodestone
useless . . .
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As to where they might have sailed before they got here, what seas
there may be between the Middle Sea and the place where the Silk Road
ends – for that, I have no shape in my mind at all.
I thought of the Admiral’s horse. Four or five curves and strokes of a
brush. Like nothing I have ever seen.
Aloud, I stated, ‘They’re not lying if they say they come from very far
away.’
The small Egyptian woman pulled her feet up onto the cushions on
the marble ledge, tucking her legs under her. She leaned her chin on her
hand. Ty-ameny of the Five Great Names might have been a robin’s egg,
with her freckles spattered across her nose. Certainly her eyes had the
same lively bird-like look to them.
‘They’re lost.’ She made the admission with clear reluctance.
Rekhmire’ shrugged, in a way that made it clear that the magnitude of
it didn’t escape him. ‘He and the interpreters and I aren’t always in
accord, but if I’m understanding Admiral Zheng He, his ship was driven
through what I would guess are the Gates of the Hesperides, past Gades,
some time last winter. Since then, he’s been sailing about the Middle
Sea.’
Including the Adriatic. The memory of what I had thought an optical
illusion was strong. I wondered if Leon would add more in
De
Pictura
on how you can have something directly under your eye and still be unable
to see what it truly is.
‘Looking for a way out.’ Ty-ameny corrected herself. ‘A way
east
.’
She frowned up at Rekhmire’, who prodded with the ferrule of his
crutch among the spread-out papers.
‘Is it as simple as that?’
‘Possibly.’ The book-buyer glanced at the Pharaoh-Queen, a frown
indenting his brows. ‘Look at what Ilario’s drawn. It’s more than possible
this Zheng He’s been at sea as long as he says he has, given the clear evidence of wear on the ship. He has trade goods from Africa in his hold.
And
goods from the far southern coasts of the Persians. It would take a
strong sea to sink that ship. He naturally wouldn’t show me his charts,
but it’s possible he’s come by sea from the land where the Silk Road
ends.’
Since there was an obvious one unspoken, I appended, ‘But?’
‘But . . . He may be lying. Or exaggerating for threat’s sake. Or – well.’
Without asking permission, the tall Egyptian shuffled himself along the
bench, settling ultimately on the cushions within an arm’s reach of the
Pharaoh-Queen.
She put her tiny hand on his arm. ‘Well?’
Rekhmire’ looked down at my spread-out papers, his brow creased
with more than worry. ‘Well, there is nothing here to confirm or deny it
. . . but what the Admiral Zheng He claims is that when he was driven
before the great storm, he was separated from the rest of his fleet.’
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Ty-ameny did precisely what I did, I noticed a moment later: stared at
the palace window overlooking the harbour, as if she could see through
the city’s massive walls, and the darkening evening, into the heart and
mind of the foreign man aboard the foreign ship.
‘“Fleet”,’ she echoed, a little derisively.
Rekhmire’ linked his broad, large fingers, and looked down at his
hands. ‘Which he claims is made up of ships the same or similar tonnage
to this one we have out there. He exaggerates, of course, because that is
what a man will do. But—’
Ty-ameny slapped his shoulder, as if she were no more than a younger
sister to him.
‘How
many
?’
‘His lost fleet,’ Rekhmire’ said, ‘he claims to consist of two hundred
ships.’
A silence filled the royal chambers.
Ty-amenhotep of the Five Great Names snorted, the sound remark-
ably like any camel’s bad temper down in Constantinople’s market-
places.
‘Two
hundred
? Oh, he might at least tell a convincing lie!’
She sprang up, absently turned on her heel, and paced with that
control of the space about her that I have grown used to seeing among
powerful men. Seeing the same gestures in a woman—
As I also rose to my feet out of respect, I realised,
Now
I
know
how
disconcerted
men
and
women
feel,
when
they
lay
eyes
on
me
.
‘Two dozen would be bad enough!’ she grumbled. ‘And even two
would pose a danger. Is it significant that this foreign admiral feels he must boast?’
One wall of this particular room was carved with bas-reliefs and
cartouches in red and blue. At least some of the sculptors, I saw, had
chosen to depict Old Alexandria falling to that Turk who had kept his
defeated enemies in iron cages. Constantinople would never need,
behind its vast walls, to be concerned with similar enemies. But more
than one ship like Zheng He’s . . .
Rekhmire’ reached for his crutch, but sank back at her gesture. He
confirmed my thoughts. ‘Not only is Zheng He lost, but lost among men
not at all like him. I think he lies and exaggerates no more than any other
commander.’ The book-buyer shrugged. ‘But then, we have hardly been
allowed to see everything on the ship.’
I had been permitted to bring only one thing away, apart from my
drawings for Ty-ameny – a tiny cup, no larger than a child’s hand, in
which Jian had served me a colourless and fairly insipid wine. Showing it
to the Pharaoh-Queen had gathered some admiration. The ceramic was
light and translucent enough that when, as now, I put my finger inside
the empty cup, I could see its shadow through the side.
Ty-amenhotep raised her voice to call for more servants to light sweet-
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smelling oil lamps; she and Rekhmire’ spoke of court politics; and I sat
regretting the terre verte pigment lost in Venice – using egg tempera on a
gesso ground, I might have begun to make an attempt at capturing the
glaze’s pearlescent shine, along with its transparency. Although that is a
task for a master, which as yet I am not.
Masaccio,
making
colour
value
into
mass
and
form
. . .
The master that should see this is dead.
I wondered, then, the word in my mind, whether the Master of Mainz
would also be housed with us. Or whether the Pharaoh-Queen’s ‘Royal
Mathematicians’ – as she named her natural philosophers – would have
him all night explaining his printing-
machina
.
Standing wearied me, but Ty-ameny continued her pacing. I
rubbed my hand across my eyes, the darkness behind my eyelids
welcome.
The familiar drag and click of Rekhmire’’s crutches let me know he
had risen.
I opened my eyes to see him join Ty-ameny at her window,
overlooking the vast city.
‘Sidon?’ he suggested, naming a port that I thought somewhere west
and south of us. ‘They might leave their ship and march home along the
Silk Road.’
‘I wish they might leave their ship here!’ Ty-ameny gave her cousin
her gamin grin. ‘But if I were the captain, I wouldn’t be parted from it.
Besides, can you imagine sailors asked to turn soldier and march all those
thousands of leagues? Never mind what they carry as cargo.’
The lamp-lit chamber was comfortable, even if it dwarfed the book-
buyer and the Pharaoh-Queen with its high ceiling and vast blocks of
masonry that made up the walls. I felt not only at ease, I realised, but as if
it were familiar.
Because neither Ty-amenhotep nor Rekhmire’ take exception to my
presence?
As Rodrigo’s King’s Freak, it never surprised me to be involved in
court business in Taraco, although I steered clear of factions. That I
could fall into the same pattern here, as Rekhmire’’s scribe and Queen