Read Swords Around the Throne Online
Authors: Ian Ross
âIf I should do anything contrary to this oath or fail to do what I have sworn, I impose a curse upon myself encompassing the destruction and total extinction of my body, soul, life, children, and my entire family, so neither earth nor sea may receive their bodies nor bear fruit for them.'
A brief pause, then the same voice spoke again. âYou may approach the Presence.'
They had given him soft-soled shoes that pinched his toes, and he walked without the familiar grate and stamp of hobnails. He kept his gaze on the floor ahead of him, then ascended carefully the first two steps of the dais.
âKneel, and perform the Adoration of the Purple.'
Castus eased himself down on one knee on the cold stone. Before him was the hem of the imperial robe, spread upon the marble floor of the dais. He stooped forward, and took hold of the heavy cloth. His fingers felt clumsy, the scar on the back of his right hand still raw and livid. He lifted the hem of the purple robe to his mouth and lightly kissed it, then let it drop.
âYou may receive the codicil.'
Still kneeling, Castus raised his hands with palms spread. He was aware of the whisper of bodies moving quietly around him, and then his hands were draped with a strip of white linen embroidered in gold. He lifted his veiled hands towards the seated emperor, and felt something placed upon them. When he lowered his hands, a thin roll of vellum sealed in purple wax lay upon the linen strip. His letter of appointment.
âAurelius Castus.' It was a shock to hear that voice again. He remembered it well, that same hard flat tone. The last time he had heard that voice, it had been screaming at him from the bloody spume of the flooded valley as the arrows whined around them. Did the emperor remember that Castus had ordered his men to retreat? If he had, that lapse had been forgiven now.
âWe accept you into our Corps of Protectores, with the rank of
ducenarius
,' the emperor said. âMay the gods give you strength in our service.'
Castus was still staring at the letter in his palms, but he could tell that the emperor had barely moved as he spoke. Not a trace of emotion in the words.
âStand,' the lisping man said quietly, âmake your salute, and retreat.'
Moving carefully, clasping the rolled codicil, Castus raised himself from the steps and took ten paces backwards, never once glancing up or turning himself from the emperor. Then he lifted his hand in salute.
â
Constantine Augustus!
' he said, and his words rang back at him. â
The gods preserve you for us! Your salvation is our salvation!
' In the echoes of that sound the whole vast chamber seemed to stir into life, men moving to either side of him as the purple drapes descended once more.
Castus felt the tension break inside him. He was trembling, and the sealed imperial letter in his fist was growing damp with sweat. He was a Protector now, one of the elite guardians of the emperor himself. The swords around the throne. And nothing in his life would be the same again.
January
AD
309
âYou know what they're calling you now, don't you?'
Nigrinus gave a thin smile and shook his head.
âThe Flycatcher,' Flaccianus told him, smirking. âI overheard them, but wasn't sure what they meant at first â it had to be you, though.'
âI can think of worse names.'
âSeems you're getting quite a reputation for yourself these days.'
âWhat is a man without a reputation?' Nigrinus said, shrugging. With a slim gold pin he speared one of the pickled olives from the dish on the table between them. âThey find what I do undignified, is that it?
The eagle does not catch flies
.'
Outside the sealed room, the night was cold and the wind skittish, rattling at the shudders and moaning in the deep courtyard. It was late, and the sprawling imperial palace was mostly closed and darkened in sleep. Only in this minor wing of the School of Notaries was there light and subtle speech.
âIt's more probably that thing you do with your mouth, when you're thinking,' Flaccianus said. He thinned his lips, then opened and closed his mouth, like a fish.
Nigrinus gave a sour grimace. He lifted the olive to his mouth. âWell, if my brothers in the imperial offices suspect I am merely catching flies...' he said thoughtfully, before chewing and swallowing, âthen it only makes them more careless, and my task more interesting.'
âBut isn't that what you want?' Flaccianus said. His fingers flexed and closed with a rattle of cheap rings. âTo catch them, I mean?'
âIf they are doing wrong, it is my sworn duty as notary of the emperor to prevent them. Didn't you take the same oath, when you joined the
agentes in rebus
?'
Flaccianus was laughing silently, his glistening cheeks bulging and contracting in the glow from the single lamp. âEveryone takes the oath,' he said. âNot everyone follows that particular clause so avidly.' He helped himself to an olive, his fingers dabbling in the dish of oil. Nigrinus tightened his lips in disgust, then put down the pin and pushed the dish away from him.
âWhat's the news from the consistorium meeting?' he said, turning to the stack of documents that Flaccianus had brought him, wax tablets and scrolls piled on the tabletop in the lamplight.
âMainly talk of the conference at Carnuntum,' Flaccianus told him. He had noticed Nigrinus abandoning the olives, and drew the dish over to his side of the table. âIt's definite that Licinius has been proclaimed as the new western Augustus. Our Constantine has been officially demoted to Caesar, although nobody expects us to pay any attention. And Maxentius is officially declared a usurper and enemy of the people. Who is Licinius anyway?'
âOld military friend of Galerius,' Nigrinus said, running his fingers over the documents. As an
agens in rebus
, an imperial courier, Flaccianus was permitted to examine the mail, but forbidden to tamper with it in any way. Nigrinus, however, had managed to lean on him. He had a remit to investigate the communications of the household of the former Augustus Maximian, and identify any potentially treasonous dealings with the usurper Maxentius in Rome. A delicate task, and necessarily conducted in secrecy.
The orders came from his own chief, Aurelius Zeno, the
primicerius notariorum
. But it could also be a dangerous task, if the surveillance were discovered. Which was why Nigrinus had seen fit to widen his remit and investigate all communications between the palace and Italy, including those of Aurelius Zeno... One could never be too careful about these things, after all.
He selected a tablet, and with a practised flick of the gold pin he lifted the seal without breaking the wax impression. Only the emperor's officials were permitted to use the imperial despatch service, and most of them used it for their own private correspondence as well. A tolerated abuse, and a useful one.
âWhat of Maximian?' he asked. Constantine's difficult father-in-law had also attended the conference on the Danube. Its ostensible purpose: to restore the harmony of the empire. Real purpose, Nigrinus thought: a blatant bid by Maximian to have his own power restored.
âApparently he left empty-handed,' Flaccianus said, idly sifting through a few of the documents. Nigrinus batted his fingers away. Flaccianus pursed his lips in assumed pique. âHe did make a last bid to tempt Diocletian out of retirement.'
âHe did?' Nigrinus looked up from the rather boring love letter he was scanning. âAnd?'
âDiocletian said...' Flaccianus began, and then chuckled. Not a pleasant sound. âHe said...
If you could see the size of the cabbages I've grown with my own hand at my villa at Spalatum, you wouldn't ask such stupid things of me!
'
Nigrinus smiled, despite himself, and had to look away. Diocletian had always been the intelligence behind the partnership of emperors. Maximian was all bluster and rage, good at leading men but impulsive, boorish and often rash. Nigrinus was glad that Diocletian had kept himself out of these current turmoils. He had always regarded the old senior emperor as an admirable figure, a titan in a world of comparative dwarfs. Let him remain with his cabbages. Heroes should know when their day is done.
âSo Maximian is coming back here to us,' Flaccianus said, âto rejoin his household-in-exile.'
âTo rejoin his loving son-in-law and devoted daughter, you mean. Such is the line to take. Meanwhile, we must assume that the breach with his son remains officially irreparable.'
Nigrinus snapped open another of the tablets. More dull stuff, something about villa renovations. He tried to force himself to concentrate, but would far rather do this alone. Any amount of code might be concealed in such mundane material â although anyone genuinely planning treason would be unlikely to communicate it via the imperial post; all he could hope for were the ripples of conspiracy, the shadow of a plot. He was sure that such a conspiracy must exist; if it did not, it was his job to create it.
âAccording to this,' he said, studying the tablet, âthe wife of Gregorius,
comes rei militaris
, claims that her husband had a dream in which he fell into a vat of purple dye.'
Flaccianus sucked in breath. âThat might give a man ideas above his station!' he said. âVery dangerous things, dreams.'
âYes, people should really try not to have them,' Nigrinus said vaguely, his eyes flickering over the text on the tablet. âOr, if they must, they should try not to tell their wives about them... What of matters in Rome?'
âThere are food riots,' Flaccianus said. âMaxentius sent in the Praetorians to put them down, which the plebs loved, of course. They're beginning to regret their choice of usurper.'
âHe had no alternative, as long as Domitius Alexander holds Africa. He can choke off the grain supply whenever he wants.'
Domitius Alexander was another problem. The former governor-in-chief of the African provinces, apparently a feeble old man, had allowed himself to be proclaimed emperor by the provincials and the garrison.
Just what the world needs now
, Nigrinus thought:
another emperor...
So Alexander was an enemy of Maxentius, who believed that he should control Africa, and needed the grain. But was he yet an ally of Constantine? Nigrinus reminded himself that he should research links between those at Constantine's court and the supporters of the African usurper.
âApparently Maxentius has also thrown out the high priest of the Christians,' Flaccianus said. âHe officially ended the persecution in Italy, declared their religion legitimate, allowed them to appoint a chief priest, but then they immediately fell to fighting among themselves. Seems that now we're not persecuting them, they're busily persecuting each other â one half reckons the other half surrendered their faith for a quiet life, or something. So Maxentius banished their man and installed his opponent. He'll have no peace with them!'
âIndeed not,' Nigrinus said. He felt a laugh gathering in his chest and suppressed it. âAnything that vexes our enemies is a boon.' But Constantine also favoured the Christians â would they cause such turmoil in his domains too?
There was nothing of interest in the documents, or nothing that his tired eyes could decipher. A shame: he always thought he would pick out the telling word or phrase, the key to the lock of treason. And with treason there came possibility...
âIf you are the Flycatcher,' Flaccianus said as he gathered the documents back into his satchel, âwhat does that make me? One of the flies? Or am I a spider, perhaps, who helps you construct your webs?'
He was smiling, unctuous. Nigrinus said nothing â he needed no help constructing his webs. And a man like Flaccianus was strictly expendable anyway, he and all those others like him, weak and venal men, liars to their oath.
âYou do rather well by me,' he said. âAs I rise, you too shall rise. One hand, as they say, washes another... And for someone with such tastes as yours, I'd say I have proved remarkably open-handed to you.'
âTastes?' Flaccianus said, and stretched his mouth in a yawn. Nigrinus looked away. âOh, that... Why, that's no cause for shame. I'm a man; my blood is red. Anyway, the deified emperor Tiberius is said to have enjoyed much the same sort of thing.'
Nigrinus fought down an expression of disgust. Surely, he thought, Flaccianus did not train infants to swim around him as he bathed and suck at his genitals, as that most depraved old emperor was said to have done? That was in the biography by Suetonius, he reflected. Such a quaint old style too, the Latin of two hundred years past. Emperors could never get away with such gross perversions now: the solemn mantle of state weighed too heavily upon them. The awesome burden of power. Or did they merely lack imagination these days? And perhaps such enormous gravitas made them brittle too...
âThere is an anecdote about the emperor Domitian,' he said in a musing tone, still thinking about the biographies of Suetonius. âHe enjoyed catching flies too. But apparently the black tyrant claimed that the lot of emperors is never happy. Nobody ever believes in conspiracies against them until the conspirators are successful, which tends to leave the emperor dead.'
âAn interesting conundrum â for the likes of you. After all, treasonable action is seldom called treason by posterity, if it succeeds.'
âExactly,' Nigrinus said with a tight smile. Very occasionally Flaccianus surprised him with his acuity. He leaned back on the end of the couch, steepling his narrow fingers. âSo, to profitably uncover a conspiracy, one must first wait for the seeds of treason to bear fruit. The more fruit, the better the crop when harvest comes.'
âBut if you wait too long...'
âThen the treason is out in the open, and you have no secrets left to reveal.'