Read Seven for a Secret Online
Authors: Mary Reed,Eric Mayer
Tags: #Mystery, #FICTION, #Mystery & Detective, #General
There were within the empire many former actresses who had planted Christian crosses upon their doors. Most such doors were modest affairs of unfinished wooden planks, opening onto the stark cenobitic cells into which many of these fallen women had retreated in search of salvation.
The cross-emblazoned doors to Theodora’s quarters in the Great Palace were altogether different. Massive, elaborately worked bronze portals—beyond them lay a glittering maze of corridors, reception halls, and sumptuous private rooms, some unglimpsed even by the emperor. They might have been the doors to a splendid church or the servants’ entrance to heaven.
The Lord Chamberlain was known to everyone at the palace and passed into the outer realms of Theodora’s environs without challenge.
He had sent Anatolius back to the courts. He wanted to conduct the interview he sought on his own, for he knew he would be uneasy and he did not want to display it to a friend.
Brilliantly robed attendants with smooth faces swarmed in the hallways like flights of angels.
They were eunuchs.
One, chattering away carelessly to a companion, brushed against him.
John stepped away and gave the creature a black glare that sent it scurrying off like a frightened girl.
John realized his fists were clenched. He tried to force himself to relax.
He did not like eunuchs. As a former military man who had been grievously wounded, he hated any comparison between himself and those pitiful beings who had never attained manhood. He was only too aware how many of the men with whom he dealt believed because his condition was the same that he shared the eunuchs’ propensities for dissembling and treachery, although they would never dare say it to the Lord Chamberlain’s face.
After traversing the halls for a short time he found an armed guard beside a doorway leading toward the inner sanctum, a soldier rather than a eunuch. He gave John directions to the office of Theodora’s head chamberlain.
Kyrillos rose languidly from a padded chair in front of an ivory inlaid desk, as if weighed down by his garments, heavily embroidered as they were with a confusion of bright, geometric patterns overlaid with golden crosses. Like many of his kind, he was unnaturally tall but hollow chested with the puffy, characterless face of an overgrown child and the pallid skin and soft hands of a woman.
“Lord Chamberlain, do you wish an audience with the empress? It can be arranged, provided she does not have a prior appointment.”
“I am not seeking an audience. I am here to speak with you.”
John’s eyes watered, so thick was the air with perfumes. The exotic, masking scents spoke of one who lacked the discipline required to control the functions of a mutilated body.
“I am profoundly honored,” said Kyrillos. “What is it you wish to talk to me about?” His voice was thin and sexless.
“I require information concerning an incident which occurred some ten years ago.”
“A long time ago. I may not remember.”
“You will remember, I am certain, especially since the emperor’s life may depend on your recollection. Not to mention your own life.”
Kyrillos waved his hand in a dismissive gesture. “Everything is life and death in my position, Lord Chamberlain. You can be assured if eggs are boiled too hard I will be stoned to death with them, and I will doubtless be slowly strangled in any silken attire in which our dear empress discerns a wrinkle. But that is as it should be, for perfection cannot but demand perfection.”
As he spoke, the eunuch did not meet John’s gaze but stared over his shoulder across the spacious but cluttered room. A variety of chairs, sofas, and tables made it appear more like a private dwelling than an imperial office. A small fountain, its waters strewn with rose petals, gurgled between the windows of one wall.
What surprised John, however, were the statues, large and small, occupying tables and wall niches and the floor space between the furniture. He picked up a bronze statuette. The figure, half covered by animal skins, reclined beside a tree stump. “You are interested in satyrs?”
“As you see.” Kyrillos’ gesture took in his small army of goat men.
A porphyry satyr played a flute while another carved from ivory danced nearby. A large torso, the remains of a life-sized sculpture, sat in a corner, while a pedestal supported the head of a youthful satyr whose forehead displayed nubs rather than horns.
“It amuses me to contemplate the poor monsters, driven by their appetites, like men,” Kyrillos went on.
“It must have cost a great deal to accumulate such a collection. Many of these works look ancient.”
Kryillos shrugged. “Most of them were gifts. From high officials. The very sort of men who will sacrifice their heads to satisfy their loins. We are fortunate not to suffer from such a repulsive and dangerous weakness, are we not, Lord Chamberlain? We did not attain our positions by rutting like common beasts.”
“I did not bring you a satyr, Kyrillos, but I expect you to answer my questions regardless.”
“I never take bribes. Can I help it if men think I do? You must know what the common people think about us eunuchs. What information do you require?”
John felt heat rising in his cheeks. He hoped he was not visibly reddening. “Around a decade ago a boy arrived here,” he said, struggling to keep the anger out of his voice. “He claimed to be the son of Theodora. He subsequently vanished.”
Kyrillos’ eyes widened. His gaze darted about without settling on John. “How many children of Theodora have I heard about over the years?” he asked in a plaintive whine. “You’d think she was a hare before she married Justinian. I’ve never taken them seriously, and as far as remembering any particular—”
“Every beggar in the streets seems to know about this boy.”
“I can’t recall the last time I ventured outside the palace. I rarely visit the gardens, let alone the streets. Besides, I never talk to beggars. They’re always so filthy and smell in the most dreadful way.”
“This was a boy named John, aged about fourteen. He arrived following the death of his father. The man had known Theodora when she lived in Egypt.”
Kyrillos was silent. There was no sound but the splashing water in the fountain. “Why is it men suppose that the conjoining of loins imparts entitlement to the issue?” he finally said, his voice even thinner than before. “How absurd to imagine an untutored, rustic child might expect a place at the court simply because of the coupling from which it resulted. Why, by my training and experience, I am more a son of Theodora than any such bastard could be.”
“You do remember such a boy?”
“I would have to ask the empress if I do,” Kyrillos smirked.
John offered a grim smile. “I understand you are in a difficult situation. I appreciate that you are loyal to the empress, but as I have explained, the safety of the emperor is involved. Would you choose to betray him?”
Kyrillos pursed his lips. “Lord Chamberlain, I believe we both know while the emperor may forgive those with whom he becomes angry, once we attract the enmity of Theodora, she will pursue us straight through the gates of heaven, and indeed often arrange for them to be opened for us.”
“Would the empress fault you for helping to preserve the throne?”
“I have only your word that the throne is at stake. If it is not, I could be—”
“I could order you executed myself,” John cut in. “I am the emperor’s Lord Chamberlain, whereas you are merely chamberlain to the empress.”
It seemed to John that Kyrillos trembled. “I will give my life for the empress if necessary,” said the eunuch all but inaudibly. “But where is your sealed order written in purple ink? If Justinian had sent you, you would be able to show me such a document.”
John’s heart had begun to pound. “And what if your fine mistress had sent me, to see whether you would put the emperor to death by your own treacherous folly and insubordination?”
“If you have approached me in the emperor’s name without his knowledge, both he and the empress shall know of it.” Kyrillos’ faint voice quavered. “But if I do you a service by saying nothing of this visit, there will be a reward, will there not?”
So even abject terror could not allay such a creature’s greed.
John felt his muscles tense. He was aware of the weight of the bronze statuette he still held. He restrained himself from lashing out in a fury, striking the repulsive eunuch with the satyr, knocking him backward into the fountain, watching the puffy face gaze up from beneath scattered rose petals on the surface of the water. The thought reminded him of his discovery of Agnes.
The image brought him to his senses. He set the satyr down. “I will see you have a reward.”
Kyrillos slumped down into the chair in front of his desk. He looked exhausted. “Thank you, Lord Chamberlain. Now that I think about it, I believe I may indeed recall the boy you mentioned. He was brought into my office by one of my slaves. The child had been wandering around the palace asking after his mother, if you can imagine that. He was questioning a servant when my slave overheard him. How he slipped into the palace I don’t know. A large number of guards were executed afterward for dereliction of duty.”
John asked for a description of the boy.
“He was a child and children all look the same. I don’t pay much attention to them. They aren’t important at court. Strange that he said his name was John.” A sly smile flickered over his face. “There was nothing to his claim, but he had been searching from one end of the palace grounds to the other. The empress would doubtless hear about it so I wished to tell her first. To my surprise, she ordered me to send him to her at once.”
“That must have suggested to you that his story was genuine?”
“Not necessarily, given Theodora’s strange humors. I thought it was possible she was bored and looking for amusement. Afterward I knew the boy was not her son.”
John asked how Kyrillos could be certain.
“Because…” Kyrillos paused and dabbed his suddenly bright eyes, unable to control his emotions like all of his kind. “Because no mother would slaughter her own child, Lord Chamberlain.”
“Theodora killed the boy?”
“Not with her own hands. But…I heard about it later, you understand…I was not present. My slave escorted the boy off to a private audience with Theodora and that was the last I saw of him. No one knows what passed between empress and child. After a short time, she summoned a favorite of hers, a rough, illiterate brute. No better than a beast, but as loyal as a cur. She placed the child in this monster’s hands. John has never been seen again.”
“And you believe Theodora ordered the boy killed?”
“What other conclusion can one draw? The brute, Theodoulos, could be trusted to carry out the task. It is well known he had done so on other occasions.”
John suppressed an oath. “And Theodoulos?”
Kyrillos shook his head and stared at the floor. “You doubtless expect him to have been executed? But no, there was no reason to do so. He would no more betray the empress than a dog betray his master. And, as I told you, he was her favorite, a pet, like that bear she used to keep caged…
“Theodoulos is a dwarf and you know how she dotes on them. Why would she destroy a plaything like that? No, she merely had his tongue cut out. I doubt a beast like him even misses it.”
And yet the grim story had traveled on other tongues from the palace grounds into the city, thought John.
As he strode through the narrow white-washed hallways of the servants’ lodgings, John’s head throbbed with pain, more, he suspected the result of his infuriating confrontation with Kyrillos than any lingering effect of the street ambush.
No splendid tapestries, mosaics, or frescoes decorated this dimly lit palace warren, only crosses provided by a benevolent empress as a reminder of the greater riches waiting in another world.
There were as many eunuchs here as in Theodora’s own quarters. They made way nervously for the tall man with a military bearing and a dark look in his eyes.
“Where can I find Theodoulos?” John demanded of one servant after another.
He was directed this way and that and eventually upon turning a corner nearly tripped over a bow-legged, barrel chested little man with massive arms.
The dwarf’s coarse features contorted when he saw John. Theodoulos must have been warned by someone who had made a swifter way through the maze of corridors ahead of John.
Theodoulos put his shoulder down and plowed it into John’s stomach, then barged past and raced down the corridor, scattering eunuchs as he went.
“Stop him!” John ordered. The eunuchs, useless creatures, merely gaped and cried out.
Cursing, John set off in pursuit.
The clamor brought more servants into the hallway. Theodoulos dodged and ducked between them. John shoved bodies aside and increased speed.
He closed ground, flung a hand out, and almost grasped the back of his prey’s tunic.
Theodoulos veered through a doorway.
John followed and burst into a kitchen.
Theodoulos scrambled onto a table and kicked a covered wicker basket toward the long brazier. The lid flew off as the basket and the chickens it contained tumbled onto the hot coals.
There was an explosion of feathers and flaming fowls, accompanied by a cacophony of screams from the cooks and the outraged cackling of prematurely roasting chickens. John knocked one of the burning chickens out of the air. Another flapped against his legs and scrabbled at his robes, shedding sparks.
John loped across the long room but it was too late.
Theodoulos had already exited via a door leading into the kitchen gardens.
John raced across herb beds to a covered walkway and down to its end.
Theodoulos was nowhere in sight.
No doubt he was familiar with every part of the grounds of the Great Palace, a vast, bewildering confusion made up of paths, plantings, buildings, courtyards, pavilions, colonnades, pools, and fountains laid out on terraces descending to the sea. A beggar had once got into the grounds and managed to elude guards for two months while living off scraps of food and an occasional loaf stolen from an unattended kitchen.
If John did not locate Theodoulos immediately he would never find him.
Glancing around, John saw an opening in a high wall of bushes. It was the way Theodoulos must have taken.
The gap led to a sculpture garden, a frozen crowd of deities, in which stood every god and goddess imagined by the classical mind.
There was no time to catalog the collection.
Movement drew his gaze to the back of the garden.
Theodoulos was creeping away between Mercury and Jupiter.
John went after him, narrowing the distance between them as the two emerged from the garden and began pounding along a wide mosaic walkway depicting mythical wildlife.
Theodoulos suddenly left the path and plunged into a stand of thickly interlaced bushes pruned into domes.
John lunged after him but whatever opening beneath the bushes Theodoulos had found was too small to accommodate John. Branches ripped at his face as fought his way forward.
His foot came down on air.
John grabbed at the surrounding branches as he started to slide over the edge of the parapet. He felt his hands sliding down, ripping off twigs and skinning his flesh.
His forward motion stopped and he pulled himself back from the edge.
Some distance below leaves fluttered toward the flag stoned courtyard on the next terrace.
Theodoulos scrambled along the low parapet over which John had almost fallen and leapt onto the steep stairway at its end.
Cursing, John followed.
His prey had increased the distance between them.
The pain in his head had become almost unbearable. Every footfall as he ran down the stairs communicated itself directly to his skull.
By the time he reached the lowest of the terraces Theodoulos had already crossed most of the equestrian field laid out there and had almost reached a line of yews through which the sea glittered.
He intended to throw himself into the sea.
The realization hit John with a sickening, hopeless certainty.
He tried to call out, to promise protection.
As if anyone could be protected against the wrath of Theodora.
The dwarf vanished between the trees.
Blackness flickered at the edge of John’s vision by the time he had followed Theodoulos to the path between the yews and the parapet wall.
He stopped.
Impossibly, Theodoulos stood in front of him. His coarse features, wide lips, and squashed nose were scarlet with rage as he strained futilely to escape from the grasp of the two excubitors who held him.
Felix put a hand like a bear’s paw on John’s shoulder. “Are you all right, my friend? It’s fortunate I happened to be passing by just now.”