“Yes, I see.” Hunter gently laid down the bowl.
“You told my servant that you arrived recently in Khanbaliq. These wonders are all new to you?”
“They exist only here, do they not?” Hunter looked around at the other items on the long tables. “No one in Europe has ever seen them.”
“That is true,” said Marco. “I hope to bring some of them back to Venice someday.”
Hunter nodded noncommittally.
“How can I help you?” Polo asked. “Do you need introductions here in the city, perhaps for your business?”
“I seek another foreigner, who goes by the nickname MC 5. He is a European, short and slight in stature.”
“What is his trade?”
Steve tensed, wondering what Hunter would say.
“We believe he is seeking a post with the government,” said Hunter.
“Ah, a civil servant.” Polo nodded. “Has he been in Khanbaliq long?”
“No,” said Hunter. “A few days at most, but maybe even less.”
“I see.” Polo turned to his servant in the doorway and spoke in heavily accented Chinese. “See to it.”
The servant bowed quickly and hurried away.
Polo picked up a large porcelain bottle and pulled out the cork stopper. “Of all the wonders in the khan’s empire, this is the most spectacular.” He poured some gray powder out of the bottle into a small stone dish.
Steve looked at Marcia, puzzled. “What did he mean when he told his servant to ‘see to it,’ about MC 5?” he whispered in Chinese.
“I think the head servant will probably order some of the others to go to the palace or ask their other contacts in the city,” said Marcia.
The servant returned to the doorway. Polo pointed to the gray powder. The servant bowed, then left again.
Steve looked back at the substance in the dish. He was fairly sure it was gunpowder. When he glanced at Marcia, she shrugged almost imperceptibly.
Without speaking, Polo cut a short piece of string from a roll with a small knife. Then he rolled the string in the powder until it was gray. He pulled it out so that the string overhung the edge of the dish and then laid it down.
The servant returned with a burning candle in a brass holder. Polo took it from him. Then the servant returned to the doorway again.
“Watch carefully,” said Polo.
Steve suppressed a smile and caught Marcia’s eye. She, too, was fighting a laugh. Hunter, of course, looked as though he had no idea what was about to happen.
Polo lit the fuse. It fizzed, sparked, and crackled. The line of fire quickly moved into the dish, where the remaining powder burned as well. Marco set the candle down on the table and stepped back.
When the gunpowder had burned down, the servant came back into the room. He leaned over the table to open a window, then picked up a small fan. As Polo moved out of his way, he waved the smoke toward the open window.
“Your companions are amused because this is old and familiar to them,” said Polo pleasantly. “But you must understand the power of this substance. When tightly packed in a container, it explodes with great force. When a hole for the release of the fire and smoke is provided, it can make the container fly up into the air.” He looked at Hunter for his reaction.
“Indeed?” Hunter said cautiously.
“A container of this type can send fire many times farther than a burning arrow,” Marco said grimly.
Hunter simply nodded.
Steve realized that Hunter did not want to enter a discussion about the potential of gunpowder. Anything he said could alter what Polo would later write in his memoirs. None of them dared react very much.
“I, too, was shocked by the idea,” said Polo. “But you will get used to seeing many wonders here in this empire if you stay long. Come. Let us return to the sitting room.”
21
Steve took his seat again in the front room and accepted more tea, poured by the young woman servant. Marcia sat next to him, as before. Hunter and Polo continued their talk about the wonders of Kublai Khan’s empire.
Steve could still hear other servants in the back of the house. Meanwhile, the two servants who had already attended them carried away the leftover food. Moments later, they brought out more of the same-fresh and steaming.
“I’m full,” Steve muttered in Chinese to Marcia.
“It’s part of the courtesy here,” said Marcia. “Food will be available as long as we keep eating it. When we left the room, it wasn’t because we had finished but because our host wanted to show us around.”
Finally, as Polo and Hunter discussed politics within the far-flung empire of the khan, the head servant came in with a younger Chinese man, who was sweaty and breathless. Polo looked up.
“Yes?”
“Xiao Sung has information for your guests, sir,” he said in Mongol.
“All right. Xiao Sung, go ahead.”
Xiao Sung took a deep breath and spoke in Chinese. “I may have located him in the khan’s palace.”
“Excellent!” Polo turned to Hunter. “Even I understand that much Chinese.”
“How do you know?” Hunter asked.
“I spoke to a courier whom Master Polo knows. He works at the palace. On the palace grounds, he saw a new courier, hired only a few days ago, who fits the description.”
“Has he spoken to this new courier?” Hunter asked. “MC 5 has a language problem here. To my knowledge, he does not speak any of the prevailing languages, though he can learn languages quickly.”
“No, our acquaintance did not speak to this man,” said Xiao Sung. “But many languages are used in Khanbaliq. If he is the man you seek, he may have been able to communicate with at least some foreign guests.”
“Couriers who cannot gossip are in great demand,” said Polo. “They betray fewer confidences. All they must do is deliver written messages or packages faithfully to the right location or individual.”
“A stranger can just arrive in the city and work in the palace of the khan?” Hunter asked. “Without references or introductions?”
“Foreign arrivals have a better chance of working in the palace than the local Chinese,” said Polo. “The Chinese are considered a danger within the palace walls, since they are the conquered people here. And because the number of foreign people who will come here cannot be predicted, they are often welcomed quickly into certain jobs.”
“I see,” said Hunter.
“MC 5 could get the post of courier, but he will be closely watched during his first months on the job to see that he is reliable. Within the palace grounds, his movements will be severely restricted. He will be assigned to accompany a trusted courier during this time, to learn his way around and to earn the trust of his superiors.”
“Then we must learn if this new courier really is MC 5,” said Hunter.
Polo frowned thoughtfully. “To your knowledge, could he be a danger of any kind to the khan?”
“No,” said Hunter. “In fact, if given the opportunity, he would risk his own well-being to save the khan’s life. But he might wish to gain the ear of the khan someday and offer some opinions.”
Polo laughed. “Nearly everyone in the empire would love to have the khan’s ear for one reason or another.” He glanced at Xiao Sung. “Is that all?”
“He has more, master,” the head servant said politely.
“Oh. Please go on.”
“I must also inform you that a search for an evil spirit of the description of this man called MC 5 is already underway in the streets.”
“Eh?” Polo glanced at Hunter. “My Chinese is poor, but did he say that a search on the streets has already begun for this man?”
“Yes,” said Hunter. “A business rival of mine also hopes to make contact with him.”
“Ah! I see.”
“Supposedly, a couple of good spirits have come down from the sky to capture MC 5,” said Xiao Sung.
“What do they look like?” Steve asked suddenly in Chinese.
“Like foreigners,” said Xiao Sung. “They resemble Master Polo and your friend, in a general way.”
Steve grinned and glanced at Hunter. “Yeah, that’s our business rival, playing games. Have they offered a reward for finding MC 5?”