Read Ilario, the Stone Golem Online
Authors: Mary Gentle
Ty-ameny’s artist, felt similarly comfortable.
‘Great Queen,’ I suggested, into the perfumed silence, that was broken
only by the noise of voices and vehicles in the city below. ‘I think the Admiral desires charts. His officer Jian was speaking of them.’
She nodded, receiving the suggestion equably. ‘Not to give too much
aid at first – Rekhmire’, if I send you with maps of the coast here, and the
waters to the east; let him see land-maps that show the road to Aleppo
and other Turkish cities. I think it’s well this Zheng He begins to believe
they’re at the other end of their trade route with us.’
‘Us barbarians.’ Rekhmire’ made the addendum gravely.
The Pharaoh-Queen gave him a look.
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‘That’s what he calls us.’ Rekhmire’ smiled down at Ty-ameny. ‘The
Admiral Zheng He says their empire has lasted five thousand years.
Older than Carthage.’
‘Five thousand years of emperors? And two hundred giant ships?’ The
Pharaoh-Queen craned to look around the carved stone frame of the
window, at pale light behind the gathering clouds. ‘I suppose they have a
trading colony on the moon, too!’
I risked mimicking Rekhmire’’s equable look. ‘That would explain why
they don’t look like anyone else, Great Queen. Or draw or paint like
anyone else.’
Ty-amenhotep of the Five Great Names glanced from me to
Rekhmire’, and stalked past us, back into the room to flop down on the
nearest seat. ‘Cousin, either you’ve been too much in Ilario’s company,
or Ilario has been too much in yours!’
The book-buyer gave me a more relaxed smile than I had seen since
we boarded the trireme in Venice.
He seated himself again on the marble bench, collecting silk pillows
with his free hand and stuffing them behind his back. I joined him. He
beckoned for my drawings, and ink and chalk-work, and the two of them
bent over my efforts again.
Jian had taken some of the Admiral’s scrolls out for me to look at.
Delicate, as if the colour had been put on with spring water, or spring
light. Language didn’t allow him to explain how.
As well as sketching all aspects that I could see of their great cistern-
shaped hull, I’d paced out the distances across the deck and made a quiet
note of the measurements. Looking at the Pharaoh-Queen Ty-ameny as
she scribbled furiously on a wax tablet, I thought her as capable as her Alexandrine ‘philosopher-scientists’ of working out the exact tonnage of
Zheng He’s ship. And the offensive power of the ship’s cannon (cast out
of recognisable bronze), and their engines that shot great long iron bolts
(if I could judge by the ammunition stores).
Among the scattered papers I saw my drawings of two-handed
ceramic containers, that might have been pots for oil or wine, but – from
Jian’s ardent keenness to remove me from their vicinity – I knew must be
weapons as well. They looked as if they could be fused. Some parts of
the hull stores had the distinctive scent of gunpowder.
Still, I thought, hauling my ankles up to sit cross-legged among the
cushions beside Rekhmire’. Magnificent as it is, it’s only one ship. It
can’t threaten to take on the navy here and bombard Constantinople’s
walls down . . .
Unless the rest of the hypothetical fleet turn up.
And then even Carthage and Venice will be pushed to hold on to sea-
power in the Middle Sea.
By the window, a patch of moonlight progressed across the shining
stone floor.
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I watched it, in silence unbroken except by the rustling of paper. My
hands felt oddly empty, since they held neither a stylus nor Onorata.
There has been little enough time, I thought, rubbing at the gravel that
seemed to be collecting in my eyes. Little enough time since we landed,
and all of it taken up by the Admiral of the Ocean Seas, but—
Sooner or later I must ask her.
Must ask the Pharaoh-Queen of New Alexandria,
How
do
I
make
the
Aldra
Pirro
Videric
into
the
First
Minister
of
Taraconensis
again?
‘—Ilario?’
The Pharaoh-Queen was turning back from dismissing a beardless fat
man who I took to be a eunuch servant. By the sound of her voice, it was
not the first time she had asked.
I straightened myself up beside Rekhmire’, piqued that he had not
used the elbow I was leaning against to nudge me into greater attention.
‘Yes, Great Queen?’
‘The hour’s late.’ Her eyes shone darkly in the many lamps’ light. ‘And
it’s a poor reward for you helping me with the foreigners’ ship. But I
need, urgently, to speak to you. Will you tell me everything that you
experienced with Carthage’s stone golem?’
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13
We left Rekhmire’ with a dozen of the Queen’s Royal Mathematicians,
checking calculations and speculations regarding the ghost ship.
A tall and unusually thin eunuch mathematician by the name of
Ahhotep joined Ty-ameny at her signal, walking the palace’s corridors
quickly enough beside me that his linen robe flicked against my bare
ankles. Two slaves took lamps ahead, light shading from terracotta to
burnt-earth colours up the carved walls.
If I had been paying closer attention, I could have overheard what Ty-
ameny and her black-haired adviser spoke of. Weariness and fear kept
me concentrating on putting one foot before the other and falling over
neither.
I wondered if Tottola had needed to call Ramiro Carrasco to feed
Onorata, and whether she was asleep or screaming.
Cool air touched my forehead. It was not until I saw sky above a wide
courtyard that I realised we had left the main palace. Obelisks blotted out
stars and moon.
Ahhotep glanced back at me with a friendly smile. The moonlight
caught the fine silver chain about his neck, that all the bureaucrats wore
symbolic of their slavery. He pointed to one side and a dimly-seen
frontage. ‘The Royal Library.’
It might have been part of the palace or separate; I would not be able
to see unless by daylight.
The pressure of air at my right hand was suddenly less; I guessed at an
empty outdoor area, perhaps a larger public square. Our footsteps came
clicking back from a nearer wall – except for Ty-ameny, barefoot and
noiseless.
What caught my interest, through the ache in my muscles, was that
Ty-ameny stopped by the vast doors of a final building, and dismissed
her slaves, taking one of the lamps into her own hands.
The
Pharaoh-Queen
of
the
Lion-Throne
can
walk
around
at
night
without
guards
. . .
Either that argues a devout respect for the Queen, unlike that in other
kingdoms, or – it belatedly occurred – her guards might merely be very
good at keeping themselves out of sight.
Ahhotep opened a postern gate, bowing Ty-ameny and myself
through. Inside, the lamp’s inadequate light showed the curves of vast
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pillars, set close together. I could not see their tops. The eunuch
mathematician took the lamp from the Queen and led the way forward,
out across an open space tiled in red and blue and gold.
‘Throne room,’ Ty-ameny murmured, as if she too were reluctant to
disturb the silence.
Ahhotep suddenly held up the oil-lamp.
I found myself facing the Carthaginian golem.
‘
Ilario!
’
The female voice sounded sharp, but with concern. I fought to throw
dizziness off and move in response.
Mosaic tiles were hard under my hands and knees.
I sat back, falling heavily to one side. Ty-ameny thrust a cloth at me.
The eunuch Ahhotep returned out of the darkness with a bucket, and
began spilling sand over something on the floor that the lamplight did
not clearly show.
My throat felt raw. The taste of vomit was disgusting in my mouth.
‘I ought to have realised!’ Ahhotep sounded as if he were repeating
himself. ‘Great Queen, I’m so sorry! Master Ilario, how can I apologise!’
I dimly remember Rekhmire’ once mentioning that the Royal Library
kept fire-buckets of sand in every room. Evidently it was a practice
throughout the palace complex.
I doubt he ever imagined them being used to cover up sick.
I pushed my heels against the tiny ridges of the mosaic, edging back.
Wiping the cloth over my mouth took away some of the taste.
Only yards away from me, at the edge of the lamplight, stood feet too
large for life-size – but skilfully painted in the colours of flesh.
The stone feet of the Carthaginian golem rested immovably against
the floor. The shadows hid its height, but I glimpsed a curve of reflected
light on its fingers, where its hands hung by its sides.
‘I should have realised!’ Ahhotep moaned again.
My own realisation was closer to
I
wish
to
hit
Ahhotep
.
The golem stood, half-painted, beside the Queen’s ancient stone
throne. Under other circumstances, the carved porphyry block would
have been impressive in itself: a dark purple stone, the seat worn down
into a deep dip by dynasty upon dynasty of Pharaohs. But the crystalline
glitter in the rock could not take my eye from the painted golem.
Like
a
Venetian
harlequin
.
I’d forgotten we hadn’t finished the face.
In the gold lamp-light, one blind stone eye looked at me. The other
was painted to have the brilliance of life. Lustrous and brown and my
stomach rose again, threateningly, as I recognised it – the evident model
for the painted stonework was Masaccio’s eyes, where he had begun to
give its face some touches of a self-portrait.
I wiped the cloth hard across my lips.
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If I’d thought anything, after Menmet-Ra’s arrival at the Alexandrine
house, it was that Ty-ameny must have had one of her craftsmen finish
off the painting here. I’d even imagined asking, with insouciant gallows
humour, ‘What butcher did you get to finish this paint job?’
Instead I throw up, like a child.
‘You know that it killed the master I was apprenticed to?’
Ty-ameny moved her bird-boned shoulders in a shrug. ‘Yes. I regret
that.
You
know, that if I had a choice, I’d wrap in anchor-chain and dump it in the Bosphorus!’
Ahhotep fumbled in the sleeves of his robes, bringing out a stylus and
wax tablets. ‘The diplomatic representatives of Carthage would notice,
Great Queen, and we dare not seem afraid of anything they offer us.
Master Ilario, anything you can tell us will be helpful. Don’t worry what
Lord Menmet-Ra may have reported before. Just begin at the start, in
your own words.’
Climbing to my feet, I realised I recognised the gleam in the skinny
eunuch’s eye.
It
is
Masaccio’s
.
I thought of Rome; the chill of early autumn. If Tommaso Cassai had
had the chance to hear about this golem, would he have cared if it had
killed a man before?
In all truth – no, he would not.
And this Ahhotep, black hair cut at jaw-level and wearing formal
Alexandrine robes, might have been the Florentine painter’s blood
brother in that respect.
All my muscles tensed, every tendon; every nerve on edge.
If
that
thing
moves,
I
will
be
out
of
this
throne
room
so
fast—
I thought it not impossible it might have connected itself to me,
somehow, in the embassy at Rome; that my presence might move it to
act.
Fear moved me to recklessness. I picked the lamp up from where
Ahhotep had stood it on the dais of the throne, and held it close to the golem. This close, the light showed me every scratch on the bronze and
brass metalwork of the joints.
The nobles of Carthage being what they are, Ty-ameny will have been
put in possession of the words to make it move.
Even if she will not use them.
‘The paint looks absurd.’ Mimic skin and veins and hair as it might,