Read The Towers of Samarcand Online

Authors: James Heneage

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Historical Fiction

The Towers of Samarcand (14 page)

BOOK: The Towers of Samarcand
7.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Suleyman walked over and sat beside her on the bench. He took her hand and it was a dead thing without bone. He looked down at it. He’d arrived expecting resistance and there’d been none. She seemed more docile than he’d ever seen her. ‘I had thought as much. Yakub has offered to take you into the city as guard.’ He paused. ‘We will be married there,’ he said, his voice softer. ‘We’ll be married in Constantinople once it falls. Which it will, soon.’

Anna turned to look at him and saw the uncertainty spread like a map across his features, invading every line and contour of his face. She felt a sudden onrush of pity. She lifted her hand and brought her fingertips to his cheek, tracing the high ridge of bone that divided it. He looked up and grasped her hand and kissed it again and again until she pulled it away. Then he took
her face between his palms and forced it up and his lips came down to hers and what had begun in Anna as pity was quickly turning to something else. She pulled away.

‘No,’ she said, wiping her lips. ‘No, not now. Not yet.’

Suleyman was breathing hard, his nostrils moving. He looked away. ‘Of course,’ he said quietly. ‘You are in mourning.’

Anna felt her heart beating loud enough to be heard. She was not in mourning because Luke was not dead. She was as sure of it as she was that there was a message in the news. They were silent for a while, both looking ahead, no part of them touching the other. Then Anna said: ‘The Varangians. Their friend is dead and I have agreed to the annulment. They must be released from their oath to Bayezid and allowed to go home.’

Suleyman frowned. There had always been conditions. Was this all part of it, part of why he loved this woman with fire for hair and jewels for eyes?

‘Very well.’

*

 

Watching the scene from the balcony of a bedroom that wasn’t hers was the Valide Sultan Gülçiçek. She was propped up on a bed and sitting on it with her was her son, the Sultan Bayezid. The bed was pulled back so that it couldn’t be seen from below. A sunshade was above them, its shadow not deep enough for her liking. But it was only Bayezid, her first-born, who was close enough to see the mark of death upon her. And smell her smell.

They had enjoyed the jornufa but were finding what had followed more interesting. They couldn’t hear anything of what was being said but Suleyman’s gestures required little explanation.

‘My grandson is in love,’ murmured Gülçiçek. Beside her was a cup of sherbet with a straw. She extended a brittle arm to it. Bayezid leant over to the cup and lifted it. He sucked up some of the sherbet before passing it to her.

‘I must be one of the few people safe from your poison, Mother,’ he said, wiping his lips with the side of her sheet.

Gülçiçek coughed and grimaced. The pain in her stomach was worse. She ignored the comment and closed her eyes. ‘He is in love and he is angry. Why is he angry, Bayezid?’

Her voice was little above a whisper and held a rattle somewhere deep within it. Speaking more than a sentence was tiring. Bayezid sighed and looked around for wine. There was none. The Sultan stood. ‘He is angry because he cannot get his way. It was always the same.’

‘Constantinople?’

The Sultan nodded. ‘I won’t storm it without a breach in the walls. I’m waiting for cannon to do it. From Venice.’

Gülçiçek would have spat if she’d been able. Venice was
Shatan
.

‘And he’s angry because I listen to Mehmed more than him these days.’ Bayezid paused. ‘He’s afraid.’

‘And he’s right to be,’ whispered the Valide Sultan. ‘You sent your own brother to the bowstring when you ascended the throne. Why not kill a son?’

Bayezid considered this. Was he strong enough to kill Suleyman? The truth was that he too was afraid. Suleyman had support at the court, the Grand Vizier for one. He turned. ‘He wants to kill me, Mother.’

Gülçiçek nodded, her eyes still closed. ‘I know.’

Gülçiçek knew most things about her son and those around him. Her tentacles were long and many, and one had been
smacked away by this young Byzantine girl with whom her grandson was in love. She hated Anna for the love bestowed on her by her grandson. She hated her for daring not to reciprocate it. She hated her for usurping her in the harem and for her own powerlessness to do anything about it. Her hatred for Anna was infinite.

But there was another Greek girl on whom Suleyman was slaking his lust, a dark girl much more to her liking. She sensed that her grandson was more afraid than Bayezid knew and that this girl was becoming more and more important to him, a refuge as much as a lover. She would prefer to see
her
marry Suleyman.

But how to bring it about?

They were both silent for a while, both listening to their own breathing, both knowing where this conversation was meant to lead. Finally Gülçiçek said, ‘I won’t do it. He is my grandson.’

‘It’s either him or me.’

Gülçiçek shook her head slowly against the pillows. ‘No, there is another way. The girl.’

‘What girl?’

‘The red-haired one he’s in love with. The one down there.’

‘What good would it do to kill her?’

Gülçiçek took in air. Talking was hard. She signalled to Bayezid to help her sit higher on the pillows.

‘It would either send him mad,’ she continued, the message coming in rasps, ‘in which case you would have reason to kill him, or it would make him see sense, in which case you wouldn’t have to. She is a large part of the reason that he’s so obsessed with taking Constantinople.’

Bayezid considered this. ‘How would you do it?’

‘I would do business with Shatan,’ she replied. ‘I would send
someone to Venice.’ She yawned. The opiates were beginning to have their effect.

‘Whom would you send?’

But she was asleep.

*

 

At the other end of the palace, in a dormitory adjacent to the Throne Room, three Varangian Guards were taking their ease.

Matthew, Nikolas and Arcadius were Luke’s closest friends, raised with him in Monemvasia and the sons of Varangians, as he was. They’d been with him at Nicopolis and had managed to escape as he had. Now they were Varangian Guards in the service of Bayezid: tall, fair-haired adornments to the Sultan’s throne. Hostages in all but name.

In the two years that they’d passed in Edirne, they’d seen emirs and sheikhs, beys and pashas bend the knee to find some favour from this man who won his battles. And they’d seen Princes from the Kingdoms of Christendom arrive to find out if Yildirim had really meant it when he’d said that he’d water his horses at St Peter’s in Rome.

The three had just come in from displaying their skill with the axe to a delegation from Dulkadir. They were still dressed in their gold, scaled armour and blue
chlamys
cloaks and their
distralia
were leaning against a wall, each blade polished to a blinding sheen. They were lying on beds, too tired to speak.

Which was how Anna found them.

To begin with they didn’t see her because their eyes were closed. She paused in the doorway to study each of them: Matthew, as fair as Luke and almost his build; Nikolas with his pointed good looks and eyes, even when shut, arced with laughter; Arcadius bigger than all of them. She thought they looked much older than when she’d last seen them.

‘I’ve found your treasure,’ she said.

Six eyes opened. ‘Anna!’

Then they were on their feet and smiling and inviting her to sit on the remaining couch. They offered her wine, which she took. They’d not seen her during their time in Edirne.

‘Yes,’ she said, ‘I found it with Plethon. It’s extraordinary.’

‘And you can’t tell us what it is.’ This was Matthew.

Anna smiled. ‘No, I can’t tell you. But it’s not gold. Something better. Something that might, perhaps, still save our empire. And I’ve brought your freedom.’

‘Our freedom?’ Matthew had come to sit beside her. ‘We’re free to leave?’

Anna nodded. ‘Free to leave. Free to go and join Luke. He needs you.’ She paused. ‘And you must take Eskalon.’

Eskalon. The horse that Luke had made his own. It was stabled at the palace and had been Suleyman’s gift to Anna. Matthew had cared for it, finding in those deep brown eyes some memory of his closest friend. He missed Luke with an intensity that surprised him.

‘Where do we go?’ he asked

‘First to Constantinople. Yakub is to take me in to see the Patriarch. I’m to get an annulment. I think Yakub will tell you where to go next.’

Matthew frowned. ‘An annulment to marry Suleyman. Was this the price of our freedom, Anna?’

Anna didn’t reply. She looked down at her hands, remembering a kiss that she hadn’t hated. Suleyman’s taste was still on her lips. She turned to Nikolas, who was sitting on the adjacent bed. ‘They will tell you that Luke is dead,’ she said. ‘Suleyman believes he was killed after committing rape. Does that sound like Luke?’

Matthew had taken her arm. ‘If he’s not dead, then why must you marry Suleyman? Why get the annulment?’

When she turned back, there were tears in her eyes. ‘Because it’s the plan,’ she said. ‘If Luke is following it, then so must we. We are not free.’

Matthew looked hard at her. There was something new and unrecognisable in her eyes. He thought suddenly of a night of wind and rain when he’d stood beside Luke on a jetty and faced the soldiers of the Mamonas family, Damian sitting on a rock, laughing. He remembered her dragged back along the jetty while Luke sailed out into a storm. ‘How do you know that Luke is still alive? He may not have raped, but that doesn’t mean that he’s alive.’

‘He is,’ she said. ‘I have been to Eskalon and looked into his eyes. Luke is alive.’

CHAPTER TEN
 
MONEMVASIA, AUTUMN 1398
 

It was evening and Pavlos Mamonas was standing on the battlements of the citadel high on the Goulas of Monemvasia looking out across the bay. The first darts of rain had flown in on a rising wind and he couldn’t see much beyond the vague outline of hills on the mainland. Beyond them lay vineyards, mile upon mile of red earth and vine that was now heavy with Malvasia grape. His grape. Could it be harvested in this weather?

The truth was that he didn’t much mind. The wine was, by now, only a small part of the Mamonas fortune. It was the Mamonas Bank on the Rialto that made the greatest profits, and it was the earnings from supplying Venetian cannon and ships to the Turks that had furnished the capital to establish it. He smiled.

But that’s not the biggest prize
.

The biggest prize of all was alum. Only two mines provided the vital fixative for the dyeing industry of Florence and the Low Countries and both were in Ottoman hands. What Pavlos Mamonas really wanted was the monopoly in alum. And the man who would give it to him was Bayezid.

He closed his eyes against the rain and moved along the battlements, opening them again when he faced the bridge that joined the island to the mainland. Below were the wharves and jetties and a hundred ships at anchor that bobbed in the sea like apples. Here the drop from the balcony was sheer and he thought of the sea pounding the rocks below, trying to claw this stubborn rock back into its depths. He heard the screech of a cat and, somewhere beyond, a church bell sounding the hour, the noise rising and falling with the wind. He breathed in the smell of salt and decay and turned to look over the Goulas plateau. Beneath the citadel stood the new barracks of the janissaries next to their little mosque. Birds blew like paper around its minaret, white as snow against the bruised sky. The Turks had brought the Mamonas family back to their city and had stayed to guard them from its hostile citizens. He looked at the two big city cisterns next to it. How clever, he thought, for the Turks to control the city’s water supply.

Water. Mamonas. You control both
.

He frowned. These days, Pavlos Mamonas did not much like to be in Monemvasia. The citizens hated him for bringing the Turks and he’d left Damian to run the family business there, an easy enough task since it could run itself. He’d come today to meet with his son and tell him some news. But Damian wasn’t there and the palace servants had looked at their feet when asked where he might be found. But Pavlos knew: in a tavern or brothel. And this was his heir.

Now it was evening and he was getting impatient. He was tired and he wanted to eat. Most of all, he wanted to get this encounter over. Where was Damian?

There was a noise from behind and he turned. Damian was leaning against the battlements, his shirt unbuttoned and his
long black hair covering half his face. Pavlos could just make out the scar that ran across his cheek below an eye that was trying to focus on him. It was the scar from the accident with the horse.

The accident that started all this
.

‘You’re drunk.’

Damian shrugged. He pushed himself up from the wall and began to button up his shirt. He had difficulty with the buttons. He gave up and pushed his hair from his face. ‘I thought you didn’t like this place.’

Pavlos Mamonas’s frown deepened. The truth was that he loved this place. Monemvasia was where he’d been born, its labyrinth of streets where he’d grown up. He loved this little city on the edge of the sea: its endless rhythm of tide and trade; its smells and echoes; its many, many cats. He thought suddenly of Damian as a boy, unscarred and without limp, high on his shoulders, fistfuls of hair in his hands, watching the Mamonas ships come in.

Before the accident
.

Six years. It was six years ago that the Varangian’s son had pushed Damian in front of the thrashing hooves of a horse. They’d told him that Luke Magoris had a gift with horses. He had, but he’d used it to save himself. Now Magoris was dead, his cowardly, raping evil expunged from the earth. At least that was something. He looked out into the gathering night and thought of what to say.

Damian spoke again, the words sliding together. ‘Have you come to watch the harvest, Father? Are you worried that I might miss a grape?’

Pavlos remained silent. The rain was coming in harder and he could feel its chill through the cloak. He heard Damian move, stumble, curse. Was it the leg? Then his son was beside
him, looking out to where he looked. Pavlos could smell the wine on his breath.

BOOK: The Towers of Samarcand
7.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Switched: Brides of the Kindred 17 by Evangeline Anderson
George Zebrowski by The Omega Point Trilogy
Guerilla Warfare (2006) by Terral, Jack - Seals 02
The 101 Dalmatians by Dodie Smith
A Sea Change by Reynolds, Annette
Tightly Wound by Mia Dymond
The Witness by Nora Roberts
Falling Hard by Barnholdt, Lauren