The Warring States (The Wave Trilogy) (45 page)

BOOK: The Warring States (The Wave Trilogy)
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‘Ah. No, sorry. He’s First Apprentice again.’

‘Oh …’

‘Well, I must be going. So nice to see you again.’

‘Tarry a while and I’ll tell you what really happened to Agrippina. I don’t suppose Sixty ever told you the truth.’

Leto looked puzzled. ‘I expect he killed her. You really thought I’d give a damn? Dear me. No wonder you stayed a selector all your life.’

Geta raced through the Wastes and did not look back. He’d always boasted that he knew when to leave the table. The one stop he’d made before leaving was the treasury, making full use of his authority to take what he wanted without explanations – another gamble, but necessary. Whatever city he stopped in couldn’t be an ally of Concord’s and he’d need to make friends quickly. He should perhaps have squirrelled away a cache outside the capital, but he did not regret it: a true gambler never hedges. To win Fortune’s favour one must be faithful – but because of his fidelity he was destitute, with only as much gold as two horses could carry and a question:
Where to?

There was nothing in the north but legions loyal to Spinther, so south then.

Geta didn’t begrudge the First Apprentice’s success – he only wished he had seen it coming. The boy had played a bad hand brilliantly. He and Spinther had obviously prearranged the assassination campaign to discredit Corvis with the Collegio; they’d decapitated Norcino’s mob, and, since Spinther had been dissimulating all along, the army was his too, and Concord was his again. He deserved it. Geta’s motley militia was the last loose end, and he expected they’d all be dead before nightfall. Shame really: nice lads. Obviously the First Apprentice had expected their leader to nobly stand by them, hence the appeal to Geta’s patriotism. That had been his one miscalculation.

The gruesome spectacle of ex-Consul Corvis’ public flaying was a timely lesson that served to forestall any more Collegio conspiracies and cool Norcino’s followers. Geta’s bravos, abandoned by their champion and offered the choice of joining Corvis or reinstatement in the army, all chose reinstatement. Though Old Town was not yet fully pacified, the First Apprentice promptly returned to the isolation of the Drawing Hall. Throughout Corvis’ power grab, Torbidda had been directing Leto’s movements, while the rest of his brain chipped away at the other conundrum. It was challenging, but no more than the simultaneous chess games they used to play in the Guild Halls. Corvis was dealt with, but Torbidda’s confidence that the other problem’s solution would dawn on him, given time, had not been borne out.

He needed to return to first principles.

For the first few revolutions, prisoners in the beast were fed a recycled mush, the origin of which was best not speculated upon. The beast was like a mine-shaft, and the fuel it mined was agony, so prisoners must be capable of producing it for as long as possible. Once cells reached a certain depth, feeding stopped; Torbidda had seen the relevant formula in Bernoulli’s notebook. It was bad luck if all the upper-row cells were full; a lower cell whose occupant had died prematurely would have to be found.

For the last week, along with food, Torbidda had been punctiliously administering the excruciating blue light, until the preacher was ready to talk. ‘Whatever you are, you’re no mendicant. Who is your master?’

Words spilled from his drooling maw. ‘The king of the world. Ages ago my brothers and I conquered the Worm, that we might serve Him for ever.’

‘Who are you?’

‘… Melcior? Or was it Balthazar? I’ve forgotten.’

Torbidda reached for the lever. ‘Don’t lie. No one forgets his name.’

‘Was that not the method by which you won the red?’

‘That’s different.’

‘Is it? Perhaps it is. I get so confused.’ He crept closer to the door. ‘Go easy on me, child. You’re still so young. You don’t know about
the years
. There’s no end to them! They bury you unless you keep moving. After the Bethlehem …
incident
, my brothers and I did what we always did and parted ways to wander the world’s dark paths, listening to rumour, watching the stars, following the winds where they led us, to the courts of strange kings, majestic huts built on jungle canopies, caves fretted with rubies and blue ice, hide-skin tents that rumble over the steppes like ships, and always we asked the same questions: is the new Emmanuel born? Are you the new Herod? It was an endless search, but I took comfort that I was not the only one searching. Back in Babylon, we three had not your wonderful lenses, so we learned to
walk
amongst the Stars in our minds. It proved a useful skill in the wandering times. No matter which of the world’s deserts we were lost in, my brothers and I could confer.’

‘These are a madman’s fantasies,’ said Torbidda.

‘They may be, for surely I am mad, the years have seen to that.’ The blind man’s face trembled with painful grief remembered. ‘Then, a few hundred years ago, I lost contact. In my dreams I no longer heard their whispers; I could not sense their passing in the world. They were gone! I pondered to myself: was the work done, the war won? Had the Old One surrendered, finally resigned his claim on this world? If so, the Magi were no longer needed. My brothers had perhaps heard the good news sooner than I and taken their sweet reward.’

‘What’s that?’

‘… sleep …’ He savoured the word as if describing the sum of the world’s treasure. ‘I took me to a desert I knew well and found there an old pillar, strong and tall, and all that stood of a temple of a god whose name I have forgotten. My plan was to let the sun and wind and rain consume me together – each had as good a claim on my bones. I sat there for – oh, a century at least, getting thinner, retreating from the world. Whenever a stranger happened by, once a decade or so, I’d ask, more out of habit than curiosity, to what king was he subject? Finally there came a day when a man – he was an engineer like you, child – told me a thing I had never heard in all my wanderings: he said he had no king!’

The blind man shook his head with dissatisfaction. ‘I insisted that all men have a king, but he insisted that he was subject to Reason alone. So I
pried
a little, asking who taught him this novel dogma. With a reverent manner he spoke of an artful man of war who’d enslaved the Water even as Solomon enslaved the Wind.’

Torbidda looked down at the dark pool at the bottom of the pit, felt the
hunger
biding there. ‘Bernoulli.’

Inside the cell, the blind man leapt with such excitement that he nearly tipped over his slop bucket.
‘I knew!
Herod was amongst us once more, and where Herod is, near about is Emmanuel. O, I was frantic! I’d weathered millennia, but now time was short. I searched between the stars for my brothers, in
deep time;
I sailed on the burning winds between suns until at last I saw a pair of shifting shadows on the bloody skin of a dying star: two wrestlers. I raced to intervene – O, but the vacuum is vast. When I reached the star, the hurly-burly was done and only a smouldering husk was left of what had been my youngest brother.’

For a time Fra Norcino said nothing, just sat humming and cooing to himself.

Torbidda leaned in to examine the shivering sobbing wreck.

‘My elder brother has fallen into apostasy,’ Norcino confessed quietly. ‘He is Magi no more.’ Suddenly he reached out, and Torbidda flinched instinctively, but he was too slow. Norcino pulled him to the bars, babbling in his ear, ‘
You
are the last Apprentice as I am the last Magi! When I returned to my body, my skin was raw and blistered and a buzzard was feeding on my eyes. I did not blame the creature; all things need sustenance. I sucked it dry and threw myself from the pillar, and after my bones healed, I limped towards Etruria. On the way, I fell in with some pilgrims—’

‘Yes, I remember,’ Torbidda said, struggling to free himself.

‘—but when I came to Concord and learned that Girolamo Bernoulli was long dead, I feared that I was too late. I launched my spirit once more into the stars, to search out my King. I did not look long. It’s
close
, Torbidda, closer than ever before. The Darkness waits behind the rising sun to swallow the world at last. It told me to tarry in the desert until the temple burned; it told me the vessel would soon be ready. Then you found me.’

‘I told you before, I’m no lamb.’ Torbidda’s hand blindly searched for the switch.

The blind man’s breath was the rabid panting of a predator about to pounce. ‘Seek your heart: you know you have a great destiny, if only you will stop running from it. Torbidda, you were born to slay God’s son!’

Torbidda’s fingers found the switch and the cell was flooded with crackling blue light. The current passed to his body from Norcino’s and when his grip fell away, they collapsed as one on either side of the bars: prisoner and jailer; courtier and king.

CHAPTER 61
Volume II: the Land across the Water
CRUSADE

Before broaching this perennially thorny subject, a brief review is necessary of the Holy Land from the expulsion of the Etruscans to the eve of the Western invasion
.

The desert has been always incontinent with prophets, but in the first century a flood of holy fools doused the land. Each heralded a new kingdom; each had a vision that bloomed as briefly as desert flowers, beautiful and inconsequential. The Prophetess’ message was different, and not merely in the sense that she preached with a dagger. In the great fire that consumed Jerusalem, she reforged Judaism into a proselytising creed. She turned an inchoate resentment of Etruscans into nationalism. In a remarkable few decades, waves of fanatical armies erupted from the desert to envelop the Middle East and beyond
.
22

After the Prophetess’ death, and under the guidance of her apostles,
23
power migrated to the more refined coastal cities; the capital shifted north to Tyre, then south to Alexandria before meeting halfway in Akka.
The nomadic fighting spirit of the desert was lauded ever louder as the Radinate became more cosmopolitan. The Melics’ belief that this savage hinterland would always save them in time of peril was about to be tested
.
24

CHAPTER 62

As the fogbank on the Tarentine coast thinned under the morning sun, a small skiff emerged, drawing on silent oars. Only when the
Tancred
and her escort were out of sight did Sofia dare speak. ‘What now?’

‘Now we run,’ said Ezra. He set the jib opposite the mainsail and goosewinged it, to put some distance between them and the watchful shores of Etruria. The streamlined little boat’s cutwater sank like a dagger into the waves and released an arterial spray that misted them. After a few hours, they cleared the strait and felt the welcome chill of the northern tradewind that would carry them south.

The course Ezra plotted would take them by Crete, then they would hug the Anatolian coast until they reached Cyprus and then finally to Akka. The first crossing was the longest, but they were lucky: Ezra didn’t share the traditional sailor’s dread of the open sea. It was imperative they escape the sea-lanes where all the traffic was Ariminumese. The Bora had brought them swiftly down the Adriatic; now the hardworking Greagale was hauling them across the Ionican. ‘Once we get beyond Tessolonika, we’ll be in the Meltrimi’s delicate hands. I hope she’s in a good mood this time of month.’

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