“Let’s see if you can catch me, Bull of Marduk.” Kathryn laughed.
“While I am at war, I leave the realm in the hands of Odikweos son of Laertes,
Wannax
of Ithaka among the Western Isles and
ekwetos
in Mycenae.”
Walker’s voice rang out across the square. Odikweos went to one knee and bowed his head before he held out his hand for the signet ring that would make him Regent of Great Achaea while the King of Men was abroad.
And I am a much safer regent than any of your own Wolf People, he thought. They will watch me and I will watch
them.
Then he walked beside his overlord down the marble steps and waited while the King poured the incense into the coals that smoldered in the bowl of the golden tripod. The translucent grains fell on the low hot flames of burning olive wood and then burned themselves in an upward spiral of blue smoke, sweet and bitter at the same time. Walker lifted his hands, his voice rising in the Invocation:
“Hear me
Lord of the battle-shattering aegis, whose power is set above Olympos
Who are lord in strength above the countries, Father of All,
If you are pleased that I built your sanctuary
If ever it pleased you that I burn all the rich thigh pieces
Of bulls, of goats, then bring to pass this wish I pray for;
Let your almighty hand shield me in battle,
For when the bright bronze spear stoops like the stallion-crested eagle,
Then safety is hard to find and only your hand ...”
White-robed priests then led a garlanded bull of sacrifice up to the altar. Behind them came a chorus of handsome youths and another of maidens richly clad, flower garlands on their brows, singing as they came. The watching crowd—cityfolk, the ordered ranks of the regiments, great lords and their retainers summoned to follow the hegemon to battle—held their breath. It was the worst of omens if the sacrificial bull should bellow or fight. This one came unresisting, with a slow majestic tread. The priests gripped its gilded horns; Odikweos had to acknowledge that such things were done more neatly now, when priests were full-time specialists paid by the Throne rather than men of rank serving only for the God’s honor and their own.
Behind the impassive mask of his face he shuddered. And the King had pointed out—how casually, how easily!—that priests appointed by the government could be relied on to get the omens right.
An acolyte bore the sacred basket; each of the great men taking part in the rite reached into it for a handful of barley to toss at the bull. The animal blinked in curiosity, and its broad pink tongue came out to lick up grains that stuck to its muzzle. From the basket Walker also took the sacrificial knife, long and curved and razor-sharp. First he cut a lock of hair from the bull’s poll and tossed it into the holy fire beside the altar. Then he waited while Odikweos sprinkled water from the god-blessed spring over the animal’s ears and eyes. It tossed its head and lowed, the symbol of its assent to the sacrifice.
The priests twisted their grip and exposed the neck. The King stepped forward and swung the blade with fluid skill; the strength and speed reminded Odikweos of his first meeting with the future sovereign, in a dark alley below the citadel of Mycenae where Walker battled assassins. He’d thought then that the foreigner was a man of his hands to be reckoned with, and he’d been right. His curiosity had led him to intervene, and that had brought him Walker’s favor. From that beginning he had gained much, from that and his own wit that had also gained him William Walker’s regard.
Blood flowed out over the altar, startlingly bright, smelling of salt and iron, and the bull went first to its knees and then to its side. Women screamed at the moment of the kill as the rite prescribed, long and shrill, drowning the death-bellow. A cheer went up from the crowd, deep and rhythmic from the soldiers, a chaotic wall of sound from the commons.
He felt another invisible shudder gripping his heart. The eyes of his mind remembered Agamemnon holding out his hand, wet with his own blood.
“The blood of Zeus, the blood of Poseidaion.”
Then leaping from the cliff, as if into the arms of the Gods his ancestors. That blood still lay on the land.
Walker laughed at it, laughed at curses and death and fate—in the secret places of his heart, laughed at the Gods. And yet he won, and won, and won ...
Athana Potnia, Gray-Eyed Lady of Wisdom,
he prayed, in his own innermost self.
Did I do right when I gave Walker my aid?
It had raised the House of his fathers to the heights of wealth and power, but ...
When the ritual was complete and the fat-wrapped thigh-bones smoked on the altar the square emptied, crowds surging away and troops marching in rippling unison, another thing Walker had brought to the Achaean lands. Odikweos put doubt from his mind as the King’s closest gathered around him.
“The omens were good,” he said politely. “The sacrifice went quiet and willing.”
“Amazing what some poppy juice in the feedbag can do,” Walker said dryly, and went on: “I shouldn’t be gone long. I expect Troy to fall before the winter solstice.”
Absently, the Ithakan noted that the last traces of the nasal whistling accent he’d once had had faded from the Wolf Lord’s Achaean.
“And I’m leaving you enough troops and ships, counting your household regiment and the Ithakan fleet—keep a close ear out for news of the West, and if Isketerol asks for help, send it.”
Odikweos nodded. “The Gods send you victory, King of Men, and spare your camp the arrows of far-shooting Apollo.”
Walker grinned. “Thanks—and if I can teach the dumb bastards not to crap anywhere they please, like sheep, maybe they will.”
The Ithakan blinked as a chuckle ran through the group. Yes, cleanliness about dung
did
seem to have something to do with the spread of sickness in a war camp, and he’d been glad to learn the rites that kept diseases of the belly away; they killed more men than bronze ever had, or bullets would. Still, it was not wise to openly taunt the power of Paiwon Apollo.
He thought of the slopes of Olympus. And striding down them a tall blackness edged with fire, like the shadow of falling night....
He forced a smile himself, lest he be singled out. The only other in the circle around the King to be Achaean-born was the chief scribe, Enkhelyawon son of Amphimedes; and he was a man who’d been raised from a mere clerk to great power, not a noble born or a fighting-man. Walker’s man ...
But remember that he has great power,
Odikweos noted mentally. There were records of everything, now. The chief scribe’s office could torment a man to death and destroy his House with writs and forms.
Paper is as great a power in the land as bronze or steel, today. Greater than a bloodline descended from the Gods.
“Helmut will keep you informed of any internal problems,” Walker went on.
Odikweos bowed his head slightly. The pug-faced blond man inclined his; his countenance looked as if it had been carved from lard.
And do not underestimate this one, either,
the Greek told himself. Mittler didn’t fight with his own hands, but he’d sent more Achaean nobles to the shades than a myriad of warriors; and he killed men as a housewife might rabbits, with a dispassionate briskness that ignored their squeals and kicks. In the old days a noble or vassal-ruler could give the High King a healthy piece of his mind when he wished, to his face. Now a man had to watch what he said by his own hearthside, or in the very marriage bed.
Walker’s one green eye caught Mittler’s. “And don’t get overenthusiastic, Helmut,” he went on. “I know that deep down you think corpses are the only politically reliable element in the kingdom, but please remember that dead men are useless except to the quartermasters, and mutton is much cheaper.”
That brought a chuckle from Walker’s closest followers, the ones who’d come with him to Tiryns so many years ago. Alice Hong’s clear soprano laughter rang out, and she licked her lips.
“Oh, mutton is so greasy,” she said. “Politically suspect pork now, done with noodles, or sweet and sour ... Ragout of Long Pig à la Hannibal Lecter—even better. Long Pig veal steak ...”
Odikweos looked at her and swallowed bile. She was not making a jest, however rough; there was no depravity beyond the Lady of Pain.
About her, I have no doubts. If ever it is in my power to slay that one, I shall. By the Kindly Ones, I shall.
A groom brought Walker’s horse; it was a tall one, three-quarter breed to the stallion he’d brought with him near a decade ago. Bastard had been the name of the sire.
The flat gray stones of Mittler’s eyes were on Alice Hong as well. Walker noticed it. “My, what a happy little family,” he said, swinging into the saddle.
“Hasta la vista,
and if anyone kills a rival without permission, I’ll crucify them.” His hand slapped his mount’s neck. “Come on, Sonofabitch. There should be a big horse present at the fall of Troy, for tradition’s sake.”
Brigadier Kenneth Hollard drew himself erect, saluted, and bowed. Beside him Raupasha daughter of Shuttarna was flat on the ground, kissing the carpet. Even now, it still felt odd to see his sister Kathryn sitting on a throne one step down from Kashtiliash’s on the dais, gorgeously robed and jeweled, a silk-and-gold headdress covering her cropped hair. The secondary throne was an addition to the room; ordinary Babylonian queens didn’t take part in royal audiences.
Part of Kat’s damned marriage contract.
He wouldn’t have thought her the type to do the romantic-plunge-into-the-unknown thing, but then, she was his sister. She’d been an annoying brat for most of his life, then they’d become friends after the Event, but when he’d thought of her love life at all, it had always seemed sort of comic.
Until it rose up and bit us all on the ass.
Of course, it had been even more disconcerting to the Babylonians to see their prince—who then became their King—go head-over-heels for a bizzare foreigner. They had a tradition of romantic love in stories and poetry and suchlike here, but it wasn’t supposed to get in the way of marriages, particularly for monarchs. It did help that a diplomatic marriage was the usual way of sealing an alliance, but there were still rumors of witchcraft bouncing about. Kat didn’t have any intention of making much concession to ancient Babylonian ideas of Woman’s Proper Place, either, and made no secret of it.
“Know that the King is not pleased, Lord Kenn’et,” Kashtiliash said.
Hollard inclined his head in acknowledgment. Kashtiliash was making a concession by holding the audience in this lesser chamber, without the whole court looking on.
“Lord King, if I were you, I wouldn’t be pleased either,” he said frankly.
There were a few Babylonians present: guards, two scribes taking notes—one on paper in the Islander-introduced Roman alphabet, the other in cuneiform on waxed boards—and a couple of courtiers. They looked a little shocked at the bluntness. Kashtiliash nodded slightly; he didn’t particularly mind, as long as the allies from Nantucket were properly respectful.
In fact, I think he finds it refreshing,
Hollard thought.
“Explain this matter to me, then,” the King said somberly.
“Lord King, Princess Raupasha was carried away by the heat of victory and misplaced gratitude,” he said, feeling a trickle of sweat running down his flanks under the uniform jacket. “She begs the King’s pardon.”
Raupasha rose to her knees and threw herself down again; Kenneth Hollard kept his face impassive, but his Yankee reflexes couldn’t help a small inward twinge. The Mitannian girl didn’t mind, she’d been raised by a retainer of her royal father and taught the standard court etiquette.
“I most humbly throw myself on the mercy of the
shar kirbat ’arbaim,
King of the Four Quarters of the Earth, descendant of the Kings Who Were Before the King, Great King, Magnificent King, the King of Kar-Duniash, King of Assyria, King of Elam, King of Mitanni, Great Bull of Marduk, the giant unto whom the Great Gods have given rule, the Mighty, the Colossal, the Omnipotent,” Raupasha said softly.
The Modest, the Humble,
Hollard added to himself. Raupasha went on: “With clasped hands, I beg that the King allow his slave to serve him as she has before.”
Kashtiliash looked as if he’d bitten into something sour for a moment.
Smart girl,
Hollard thought, admiration taking the sting out of his irritation. She’d just reminded Kashtiliash that while the Nantucketers had helped him conquer Assyria—he’d been Prince Kashtiliash last year, in command of the Babylonian armies for his father Shagarakti-Shuriash-it had been Raupasha’s own hand that cut the throat of Tukulti-Ninurta.
Who, in the original history we showed him, defeated Kashtiliash and brought him a prisoner to Asshur.
Plus she’d personally saved his father’s life during an assassination attempt last spring. Some monarchs would just be angered by a reminder like that, but Kash ...
The hard amber-brown eyes met Hollard’s blue. “And if I decide that the Rivers country should not be a vassal-kingdom under Raupasha daughter of Shuttarna, but instead a province under a
sakkanakkum,
a royal governor appointed by myself?” he said.
Hollard nodded. “The land is the King’s, to dispose as he sees fit,” he said steadily. “The terms of our treaty of alliance are clear. The Republic of Nantucket seeks no territory in these lands, but only to make war on William Walker, the rebel and usurper who has siezed the throne of Achaea.”
Kashtiliash continued relentlessly. “And if the Hurri-folk of the north rise against me, on hearing this news?”
Raupasha’s fingers clutched at the carpet, but she kept a shivering stillness. Hollard answered crisply: “Then, as our treaty states, we will fight at your side against all rebels until Walker is cast down.”