Read The Tale of Krispos Online
Authors: Harry Turtledove
“Now the small war, the needful war, is done,” Krispos said. “Now we can start the greater fight and give you the vengeance you deserve. By the lord with the great and good mind, I pledge again that you will have it.”
He’d thought that would give the nobles and servants another chance to cheer. Instead they stood silently, as if bereft of their tongues as Iakovitzes. Iakovitzes himself unhooked from his belt a tablet ornamented with enamelwork and precious stones; his stylus looked to be made of gold. When the noble opened the tablet, Krispos’ nose told him the wax was perfumed. Maimed Iakovitzes might be, but he’d adapted to his injury with panache.
He wrote quickly. “Then you haven’t heard, Your Majesty? How could you not have?”
“Heard what?” Krispos said when he’d read the words.
Several people guessed what he meant and started to answer, but Iakovitzes waved them to silence. His stylus raced over the wax with tiny slithery sounds. When he was done, he handed the tablet to Krispos. “About ten days ago, Agapetos was heavily defeated north of Imbros. Mavros gathered what force he could and set out to avenge the loss.”
Krispos stared at the tablet as if the words on it had betrayed him. “The good god knows, enough couriers brought me dispatches from the city while I was in the westlands. Set against this news, every word they carried was so much gossip and fiddle-faddle.
So why was I not told?
” His gaze fastened on Barsymes.
The vestiarios’ face went pale as milk. “But Majesty,” he quavered, “the Sevastos assured me he was keeping you fully informed before he departed for the frontier and promised to continue doing so while on campaign.”
“I don’t believe you,” Krispos said. “Why would he do anything so”—he groped for a word—“so foolhardy?” But that was hardly out of his mouth before he saw an answer. His foster brother had known Krispos did not want him to go out of the city to fight, but not why. If Mavros thought Krispos doubted his courage or ability, he might well have wanted to win a victory just to prove him wrong. And he would have to do it secretly, to keep Krispos from stopping him.
But Krispos knew Mavros was able and brave—would he have named him Sevastos otherwise? What he feared was for his foster brother’s safety. Tanilis was not the sort to send idle warnings.
The taste of triumph turned bitter in his mouth. He turned and dashed back through the seawall gate, ignoring the startled cries that rose behind him. The captain and crew of the imperial barge gaped to see him reappear. He ignored their surprise, too. “Row back across the Cattle-Crossing fast as you can,” he told the captain. “Order Mammianos to ready the whole army to cross to this side as fast as boats can bring it here. Tell him I intend to move north against Harvas the instant the whole force is here. Do you have all that?”
“I—think so, Your Majesty.” Stammering a little, the barge captain repeated his orders. Krispos nodded curtly. The captain bawled orders to his men. They cast off the ropes that held the barge next to the wall, then backed oars. As if it were a fighting galley, the imperial barge pivoted almost in its own length, then streaked toward the westlands.
Krispos stood back. Barsymes stood in the gateway. “What of the celebratory procession down Middle Street tomorrow, Your Majesty?” he said. “What of the festival of thanksgiving at the High Temple? What of the distribution of largess to the people?”
“Cancel everything,” Krispos snapped. After a moment he reconsidered. “No, go on and pay out the largess—that’ll keep the city folk happy enough for a while. But with the northern frontier coming to pieces, I don’t think we have much to celebrate.”
“As you wish, Your Majesty,” Barsymes said with a sorrowful bow: he lived for ceremonial. “What will you do with your brief time in the city, then?”
“Talk with my generals,” Krispos said—the first thing that entered his mind. He went on, “See Dara for a bit.” Not only did he miss her, he knew he had to stay on good terms with her, the more so now that her father was with him. As something close to an afterthought, he added, “I’ll see Phostis, too.”
“Very well, Your Majesty.” Now Barsymes sounded as if all was very well; with no chance for a child of his own, the eunuch doted on Phostis. “As your generals are still on the far side of the Cattle-Crossing, shall I conduct you to the imperial residence in the meantime?”
“Good enough.” Krispos smiled at the vestiarios’ unflagging efficiency. Barsymes waved. A dozen parasol-bearers—the imperial number—lined up in front of Krispos. He followed the colorful silk canopies toward the grove of cherry trees that surrounded his private chambers—not, he thought, that anything having to do with the Emperor’s person was what would be reckoned private for anyone else.
The Halogai outside the residence sprang to attention when they saw the parasol-bearers. “Majesty!” they shouted.
“Your brothers fought bravely, battling the rebel,” Krispos said.
Grins split the northerners’ faces. “Hear how he speaks in our style,” one said. Krispos grinned, too, glad they’d noticed. He climbed the steps and strode into the imperial residence.
Barsymes bustled past him. “Let me fetch the nurse, Your Majesty, with your son.” He hurried down the hall, calling for the woman. She came out of a doorway. Phostis was in her arms.
She squeaked when she saw Krispos. “Your Majesty! We hadn’t looked for you so soon. But come see what a fine lad your son’s gotten to be.” She held out the baby invitingly. Krispos took him. The bit of practice he’d had holding Phostis before he went on campaign came back to him. He had a good deal more to hold now.
He lifted the baby up close to his face. As he always did, he tried to decide whom Phostis resembled. As if deliberately to keep him in the dark, Phostis still looked like his mother—and like himself. His features seemed far more distinctly his own than they had when he was newborn. He did have his mother’s eyes, though—and his grandfather’s.
Phostis was looking at Krispos, too, without recognition but with interest. When his eyes met Krispos’, he smiled. Delighted, Krispos smiled back.
“See how he takes to you?” the nurse crooned. “Isn’t that sweet?”
The baby’s face scrunched up in fierce concentration. Krispos felt the arm he had under Phostis’ bottom grow warm and damp. He handed him back to the nurse. “I think he’s made a mess.” A moment later any possible doubt left him.
“They have a habit of doing that,” the nurse said. Krispos nodded; with a farm upbringing, he was intimately familiar with messes of every variety. The nurse went on, “I’ll clean him up. I expect you want to see your lady, anyhow.”
“Yes,” Krispos said. “I don’t think I’ll be in the city very long.” That did not surprise the nurse, but then, she’d known about the disaster near Imbros longer than he had.
Barsymes said, “Her Majesty will be at the needle this time of day.” He led Krispos past the portrait of Stavrakios. Krispos wondered how the tough old Avtokrator would have judged his first war.
The sewing room had a fine north-facing window. Dara sat by it, bent close to her work. The tapestry on which she labored might not be finished in her lifetime; when one day it was, it would hang in the Grand Courtroom. She knew sober pride that the finest embroiderers in the city judged her skill great enough to merit inclusion in such a project.
She did not notice the door open behind her. Only when Krispos stepped between her and the window and made the light change did she look up; even after that, she needed a moment to return from the peacock whose shining feathers spread wider with each stitch she took.
“It’s beautiful work,” Krispos said.
She heard the praise in his voice, nodded without false modesty. “It was going well today, I thought.” She jabbed needle into linen, set the tapestry aside, and got to her feet. “Which doesn’t mean I can’t put it down to hail a conqueror.” Smiling now, she squeezed him hard enough to make the air whoosh from his lungs, then tilted her face up for a kiss.
“Aye, one victory won,” he said after a bit. His hands lingered, not wanting to draw away from her. He saw that pleased her, but saw also by the way her eyebrows lowered slightly and pinched together that she was not altogether content. He thought he knew why. His tone roughened. “But, also, I learn just now, a loss in the north to balance it.”
That further sobered her. “Yes,” she said. Then, after a pause, she asked, “How do you mean, you just now learn? Surely Mavros sent word on to you of what had happened to Agapetos.”
“Not a whisper of it,” Krispos said angrily, “nor that he aimed to take the field himself. I think he hid it from me on purpose because he knew I’d forbid him on account of his mother’s letter.”
“I’d forgotten that.” Dara’s eyes went wide. “What will you do, then?”
“Go after him and—I hope—rescue him from his folly.” Krispos scowled, irritated as much with himself as with Mavros. “I wish I’d flat-out told him what Tanilis wrote. But I was afraid he’d sally forth then just to prove he wouldn’t let her run his life. And so I didn’t spell things out—and he’s sallied forth anyhow.”
He misliked that; it had the air of the working out of some malign fate. He drew the sun-circle over his heart to turn aside the evil omen.
Dara also signed herself. She said, “Not all foretelling is truth, for which the lord with the great and good mind be praised. Who could bear to live, knowing that someone less than the good god knew what was to come? Maybe Tanilis felt a mother’s fear and made too much of it. Now that I have Phostis, I know how that can be.”
“Maybe.” But Krispos did not believe it. Tanilis had called him “Majesty” when only a madman could have imagined he would ever dwell in the imperial residence, wearing imperial robes. Only a madman—or one who saw true.
“Have you further need for my services, Majesties?” Barsymes asked. Krispos and Dara, their eyes on each other, shook their heads at the same time. “Then if you will excuse me—” The vestiarios bowed his way out.
No sooner had he gone than Dara demanded, “And how many willing, pretty country girls kept your bed warm while you were away in the westlands?”
It might have been a joke; she kept her tone light. But Krispos did not think it was. After being married to Anthimos, Dara could hardly be blamed for doubting his fidelity when he was not under her eye—maybe even when he was. After a little thought he answered, “Do you think I’d be stupid enough to do anything like that when your father was in camp with me for most of the campaign?”
“No, I suppose not,” she said judiciously. She set hands on hips and looked up as she had to do to meet his eyes. “You slept alone, then, all the time you were away from the city?”
“I said so.”
“Prove it.”
Krispos let a long, exasperated breath hiss out. “How am I supposed to—?” In the middle of his sentence, he saw a way. Four quick steps took him to the door. He slammed and barred it. As quickly, he returned to her side and took her in his arms. His lips came down on hers.
Some while later she said, “Get off me, will you? Not only is the floor hard, it’s cold, and I expect I have the marks of mosaic tiles on my backside, too.”
Krispos sat back on his haunches. Dara drew one leg up past him and rolled away. He said, “Yes, as a matter of fact, you do.”
“I thought as much,” she said darkly. But in spite of herself, she could not contrive to sound annoyed. “I hadn’t looked for your proof to be so—vehement.”
“That?” Krispos raised an eyebrow. “After going without for so long, that was just the beginning of my proof.”
“Braggart,” she said before her eyes left his face. Then her brows also lifted. “What have we here?” Smiling, she reached out a hand to discover what they had there. That, too, rose to the occasion. Before they began again, she said, “Can the second part of your proof wait till we go to the bedchamber? It would be more comfortable there.”
“So it would,” Krispos said. “Why not?” An advantage of the imperial robes was that they slid off—and now on—quickly and easily. Their principal disadvantage became obvious when the weather got cold. Peasants sensibly labored in tunics and trousers. Krispos shivered when he thought of rounding up sheep in winter with an icy wind whistling up a robe and howling around his private parts.
That was not a worry at the moment. Serving maids grinned as Krispos and Dara headed for the bedchamber hand in hand. Krispos carefully took no notice of the grins. He had begun to resign himself to the prospect of a life led with scant privacy. That had been easy for Anthimos, who’d owned no inhibitions of any sort. It could still sometimes unnerve Krispos. He wondered if the servants kept count.
When he was behind a closed door again, such trivial concerns vanished. He doffed his robe a second time, then helped Dara off with hers. They lay down together. This time they made slower, less driven love, kissing, caressing, joining together, and then separating once more to spin it out and make it last. As the afterglow faded, Krispos said, “I think I’ll bring your father along with me when I take the army north.”
Beside him, Dara laughed. “You needn’t do it for my sake. I couldn’t hope for more or better proof than you’ve given me. Or could I?” Her hand lazily toyed with him. “Shall we see what comes up?”
“I think you’ll have to get your comeuppance another time,” he said.
She snorted, gave him an almost painful squeeze, then sat up. Abruptly she was serious. “As I think on it, having my father with you might be a good idea. If he stayed here in the city while you were away, he could forget on whose head the crown properly belongs.”
“I can see that,” Krispos said. “He’s an able man, and able, too, to keep his own counsel. Maybe that comes of his living by the western frontier; from all I’ve seen, it’s rare among folk here in the city. People here show off what they know, to make themselves seem important.”
“You’ve always been able to keep secret what needs keeping,” Dara said. Krispos nodded; the very bed in which they lay testified to that. Dara went on, “Why are you surprised others can do the same?”
“I didn’t say that.” Krispos paused to put what he felt into words. “It was easier for me because people looked down at me for so long. They didn’t take me seriously for a long time—I don’t think Petronas took me seriously until the siege train came up to Antigonos. But he’d known your father for years, and your father managed to keep his trust till the instant he came over to me.”