Read Ilario, the Stone Golem Online
Authors: Mary Gentle
steering her to sit down. He began to speak quietly to her.
Orazi stationed Berenguer at the door, he himself leaning on the
windowsill. A jerk of his head summoned Carrasco.
There is a choice between security and privacy. The Armenian
sergeant will give as much of the latter as he safely can.
Marcomir put his finger next to Onorata’s hand, and examined the
nails. Hers were identical to his, but so very small.
‘Got into trouble about selling you, Ilario,’ he murmured, quietly
enough that Onorata rummaged herself back into a light doze, leaning
against me.
‘You did?’ I stroked her cheek. Fed and changed and allowed to sleep
– but for not too long – would usually mean she woke now in a good
temper.
‘Spoke to One-Eye, like she said.’
He jerked his head, indicating Donata, who stood to pour more wine
for Honorius.
‘Few weeks later, my boss down at the Hall, he calls me in. He says it
doesn’t look good if merchants and visitors to Carthage vanish. Not a
hard slap on the wrist, but . . . the customs job keeps us. So I said no, of
course not, wouldn’t happen again. Even if it meant things would be a bit
tight.’
He
does
think
I
intend
to
ask
him
for
money.
Onorata screwed up nose and eyes and yawned.
Marcomir shook his head in wonder. He grinned up at me suddenly,
and sat back.
‘I
said
we were doing people favours! Look at you. One-Eye said your
owner was a hard son of a bitch when it came to a bargain, even if he was
good-looking. But I guess you got away from him?’
I deliberately refused to look in Rekhmire’’s direction. ‘My master
freed me.’
Marcomir thrust a hand through his hair again. ‘What do you want
from me?’
I registered Donata’s quick frown.
Donata stayed alert to her son’s reactions, even though she was deep
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in conversation with my father. I wondered briefly how much Onorata
might take after her, in the future; this . . . grandmother.
As much as Rosamunda is, Donata is Onorata’s grandmother.
I pictured the queen of the Court of Ladies and Donata in the same
room – or rather, failed to picture it.
‘I can’t keep a child on my wages.’ Marcomir opened a long-fingered
hand in my direction. ‘But you’re dressed well enough, and so’s the babe,
and you’re free, so I suppose that’s not what you want anyway. Is she
truly mine?’
‘You don’t remember?’
The light from the clay lamp gave everything a golden cast,
transmuting his flush from something pink by sunlight into something
bruise-coloured.
‘I follow in the Roman tradition,’ he said, standing on his dignity. ‘A
boy or an older man, for true companionship. And a woman for
marriage one day, I suppose we must have . . . with what you are . . . ’ He
shrugged again. ‘It’s not like I intended to – to—’
‘That’s my father over there: spare me the detailed explanations!’
The Carthaginian customs officer looked over at the retired Captain-
General of the House of Trastamara.
Marcomir turned quickly back to me, being unfamiliar with that
particular poker-face that in Honorius indicates the holding back of a
belly-laugh.
‘If it’s not money,’ Marcomir persisted, ‘then what is it you want?
Oh
.
I understand. You want Carthaginian citizenship for her! Through her
father.’
We
have
had
this
conversation
before!
Perceiving Honorius about to fume and swear, I said, ‘No citizenship.
That’s not the issue.’
Marcomir’s black eyes glinted in the light from the lamps. Bent over,
Onorata evidently had him fascinated. He shook his head.
‘I’d never thought of being a father!’ He suddenly sat up. ‘You’re a
hermaphrodite: are you sure you didn’t do it yourself?’
Berenguer’s jaw dropped. Orazi muttered at him, under his breath:
‘That one was worthy of you!’
It startled me that I liked Marcomir’s appalling honesty.
At least he acknowledges openly what I am.
I snorted. ‘I’m a hermaphrodite, not a contortionist!’
I was suddenly faced by the backs of three brigandines: Orazi’s
shoulders shaking, and Berenguer evidently not daring to look at his
Captain-General.
Marcomir only looked bewildered. ‘Why did you bring her, then? Can
I – can I hold her?’
‘Sit closer to me.’
His thigh was warm against mine; I could feel the tension of his
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muscles. I eased Onorata from my lap to his, keeping my hands curved
around her hip and the back of her head until she was safely settled.
Catching his glance, I explained, ‘Not all men know how to handle
babies.’
I did not add what would have been true:
I
learned
most
of
what
I
know
from
a
failed
assassin
and
a
squad
of
soldiers
.
.
.
Marcomir held the sleeping form of my child.
I remember his long fingers, and his cool hands.
I remember the conception of this child.
Outside this room, I had seen narrow steps. They would lead to an
upstairs room: Marcomir’s clothes tossed absently on the floor. Blankets
of striped wool spread over a truckle bed too small for two, but possible
when one sleeps intertwined, knee socketing home behind knee; buttocks
tucked into crotch . . .
I
miss
the
warmth
of
sleeping
with
someone
else.
In Taraco, I had a bed to myself in the hermit’s cell; that was different
to sleeping in a bundle with Rodrigo Sanguerra’s other slaves. Sleeping
communally has its disadvantages – not least any other slaves attempting
what Marcomir and I had engaged in while not properly awake. But it
has its comforts too.
I flushed and looked away, seeking the window for light, but finding
only the brown darkness of the Penitence.
Because when I imagine the warmth of a body next to my skin, I don’t
think of Marcomir now. Or Sulva. Or Leon Battista; or even Ty-ameny,
beautiful as the small woman is.
After some considerable reflection, I don’t think of Ramiro Carrasco,
either.
Marcomir stroked Onorata’s temple very lightly. I wondered how long
before she would wake up, cry for the brightly-dyed wooden blocks that
Tottola had carved as toys for her, demand feeding, and in general cease
to look like a sculpted angel in a chapel.
I felt a little shy. ‘I thought you would want to know about her.’
‘I’m glad I know.’
More clumsily, but with a willingness to be gentle, Marcomir guided
her sleep-limp body back into my lap.
‘I can’t take her. Even if she was a son, I couldn’t.’
I winced.
Harsher than I otherwise would have been, I snapped, ‘I don’t want
you to!’
Donata sprang up. She bustled over to where we sat, and peered down
into Onorata’s pink, creased face. ‘Just as well you got free of that
Egyptian who bought you – he would have drowned her for you like a
kitten!’
Caught between wanting to cry with laughter, and merely wanting to
cry, I only shook my head.
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‘Oh, he would. And men are always happy if a girl or a cripple goes to
the tophet.’ The shadow of some old bitterness crossed her face. She
seated herself on the other side of her son, leaning in to look at Onorata.
‘Is she all right?’
‘As much as we can know.’
As much as the Alexandrine physicians can swear to.
Donata reached out to touch Onorata’s cheek. ‘I know we didn’t treat
you too well when you were here last. If there’s anything we can do . . . ’
Without looking at Honorius, I said, ‘I think a father, a good father, is
one of the best things a child can have. If she had his friendship, that would be all I would ask.’
I found myself looking at the top of Marcomir’s head as he gazed
down at Onorata’s black lashes, and the fingers of her clenched fist.
Hesitantly, he put his hand over her hand, hiding half her arm in the
shadow of his fingers.
It came to me that a man who works for the city’s customs is probably
used to looking keenly at things. Marcomir’s examination of her might
show him resemblances that I couldn’t see.
Honorius’s deep voice said, ‘There’ll be a place you can send word to.
You can see her if you want to.’
It was Donata who said, ‘Thank you,’ in a creakingly graceless voice
that was moving in its honesty.
Marcomir’s finger absently brushed Onorata’s forehead, and she
opened blue eyes.
He stopped.
I saw they were looking at each other.
He moved his finger, watched her gaze follow it, and smiled at her.
‘If the worst happens,’ I said abruptly. ‘If I and all my family die and
she’s left alone, I want her to have a father.’
Marcomir’s head came up. I saw in his eyes that expectation of
poverty, disease, accident, and war that slaves and poor men have.
Wealth protects. But even then, not wholly.
His smile slipped slowly away. ‘I couldn’t pay for her keep.’
‘Could you let her die of hunger?’
‘I – no; I could not.’
A knock sounded on the room door. Donata glared, and went to the
door, opening it a crack, and beginning a long and rambling quarrel with
a man clearly a tenant.
Marcomir spoke under their rapid argument. ‘It wouldn’t be any use
sending her to me. Mother’s old. In a few years I’ll be keeping both of us.
There isn’t money or room for a child as well.’
‘I don’t doubt you.’
‘Wait . . . ’ The Carthaginian glanced around, momentarily frowning.
He got up and went to a small tin chest, pushed back on the highest
niche by the shelves.
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He lifted something out of it and came back to me.
I thought for a moment it was a pair of wax tablets, the two wooden
shutters clapped together. But it was small, no larger than the palm of my
hand, and the wooden shutters opened out from the centre. I had both
hands busy with Onorata. Marcomir folded the shutters back.
‘Look.’ He cupped it in his hands. ‘This isn’t much, but, I don’t know,
maybe you could sell it, buy her something nice with the money?’
The tiny portrait of a girl’s head had been cut from a much larger
work, clearly, and glued onto the wooden backing. Or it might have been
an androgynous young man: the halo backing the head and the rich
trappings on the clothes could indicate a saint or angel.
‘Thought it was real gold, when I saw it – gold leaf?’ Marcomir’s
forefinger traced the line of the halo, and the gold embroidery on the
front of the robe. ‘But someone’s just painted it to look like gold.’
He sounded more than a little disgusted.
Donata slammed the door on the argument from outside, with a curt
dismissal. She stomped back across the room, shot a glance at what was
in Marcomir’s hands, and folded her lips together severely.
‘I’ll take it!’ I said hastily. ‘I’ll tell her it was her father’s gift.’
Marcomir nodded, with a smile.
Onorata made a small querulous sound, swiping her open hand at
him. I had no time to point out that she missed holding onto his finger.
The signs of storm began to show: she screwed up her eyes, and began to
square her mouth and grizzle.
‘I should take her back to the ship.’ I jiggled her on my knee, easier to
do now that she could hold her head up, but she wasn’t mollified. The
grizzle turned into a full-throated bawl, and began to work up to a
scream.
At these moments, I look around for someone to hand her back to.
Honorius only smiled at me.
I freed one hand to take the tiny shuttered portrait, slipped it inside my
robe, and mouthed emphatically to Marcomir over Onorata’s open-
mouthed yelling. ‘Remember, she’s your daughter! You can always see
her, when it’s possible—’
‘I’m sorry we sold you!’ he blurted out. ‘Can you forgive me, like you
have the assassin?’
Onorata chose that moment to hiccup and draw breath, producing as