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“Don’t be embarrassed, Peter. I may be much younger than you but like the abbot I am a man of God and am here to serve all in such ways as can be done.”

“And what would you advise?” Peter asked reluctantly, since it had become obvious he was going to be given advice whether he wanted it or not. It occurred to him Stephen’s personal solution to worldly entanglements may have been to avoid them by entering holy orders.

“You know what the scriptures say, Peter. The wife is bound to obey her husband. It is up to you to instruct her, and it is up to her to follow your instructions.”

Peter murmured a reluctant assent. He was not comfortable giving orders, especially to Hypatia.

“And just as importantly,” Stephen continued. “You must pray to the Lord together.”

***

“You may go now, Hypatia.” Cornelia finally said.

The conversation had been brief and awkward. Cornelia had done her best to indicate her concern to Hypatia, stressing that her private life was considered such but that a certain standard of behavior was expected.

“Thank you for speaking with me, mistress,” Hypatia told her. “I will take your advice and pray to my goddess.”

Chapter Twenty-seven

Both Bacchus and Fortuna frowned on John.

Posing as a petty thief and talking loudly about his grudge against a man who dealt in iron shipments, he stopped at every tavern he could locate. But a sip of wine in this tavern, two sips in another, made him sleepy before he chanced upon anyone with anything useful to pass on. No farther forward, he carefully groped his way up the creaking staircase at his lodgings as dawn ushered in another day for the swarming residents of Lechaion.

It was afternoon before he rose, prepared to resume his search. Given it seemed likely those who might have information for sale would not emerge from their dark corners and squalid rooms until the day was further advanced, John spent a few hours sitting on the steps of a church watching passersby and catching fragments of conversation as the crowd ebbed to and fro along the dusty thoroughfare.

Occasionally he heard enough to distinguish the topic under discussion. By and large they represented the cosmopolitan nature of the port. There was a heavily bearded, wide-shouldered man with a rolling gait suggesting his profession was that of a sailor, whose shorter, blond companion recommended a certain house on the other side of the sacred building as one where a lonely stranger could find all the comforts of home.

A man with a broad Germanic accent strolled by, singing a war-like song, beating time with a large fist, pausing to glare at a woman who accosted him. However, John noted, they went off together after a short conversation.

Two wine merchants stood at the foot of the steps bewailing their losses, with dark references to a certain captain whose transport fees were ruining their business and furthermore was not reliable in his promises, no doubt because, as one remarked to the other, it’s empty barrels that sound the loudest.

A pale, stooped fellow carrying two tablets hurried by, perhaps a clerk in one of the warehouses around the harbor. Occasionally a priest left or entered the building behind John, sparing no glance for the nondescriptly dressed lounger on their steps. A man breathing wine fumes advised John to trust no one but his own person and his horse if he had one, and if he had one he was a rich man indeed, before sprawling in the shadow of the building and falling asleep in the dirt.

The streets and forums of a great city presented an epic richer than Homer could, for anyone who cared to sit quietly and keep his ears open. Not surprisingly, however, on this day, in this part of Greece, Theophilus did not appear in the story.

The inebriate snored and shifted fitfully, as the descending sun gradually pulled the shadow away from him. John got to his feet, walked to the docks, and purchased a meal of hot peas. After that he began his quest again, seeking out taverns and inns he had not visited the night before.

“Looking for that swine Theophilus, if that’s his real name,” he would announce in a loud voice on entering each establishment. “Owes me money. Ran off without paying. Him and his so-called iron shipments! Silk in them crates, I’ll be bound. Anyone know him? There’s a coin or two in the telling.”

In one place a little man who looked and smelled as if he’d just crawled out of a hole in the scabrous wall sidled up to John. “Theophilus? I seen the man. Scar on his cheek, like you said.”

John turned a hopeful look toward the fellow. “Heavy, black beard?”

“That’s him!”

“Theophilus doesn’t have a beard.”

The man’s whiskery face twitched. “The light was bad.”

John reached for his blade. “Stop wasting my time.”

The man vanished as quickly as a rat caught in the sudden light of a lamp.

The scene recurred with variations more than once.

And so the afternoon wore away. Shortly after sunset, John decided to return to his room for a short rest. The landlord’s agent dozed at his post, hardly stirring as John passed. The lamp at the bottom of the stairs had sputtered out and John started up gingerly, clutching the wobbly handrail as his heels threatened to slide backward on the weirdly tilted steps.

He wasn’t prepared for the figure that came flying out of the dimness, shrieking and clawing at his garment. Knocked backward, he managed to twist around so he slammed into the wall rather than falling down the stairs.

The hands stopped clawing and clung instead. A miasma of cheap wine and cheaper perfume enveloped him. “Demons take these stairs!” the woman said in a hoarse voice. “I lost my balance, sir!”

John grasped a pair of bony shoulders and pushed her gently away. In the glimmer of illumination from the corridor above he made out an elderly face framed in red hair. The same woman he’d briefly seen lying in the street when he’d first arrived.

“Your name is Maritza?”

What he could see of her face in the shadows registered surprise. “You are a sharp one, aren’t you? I heard you were looking for that bastard Theophilus. I have information for a price. He has a scar here-” She indicated its location.

“A black beard too?”

Maritza gave a cawing laugh. “Beard? I doubt that miserable worm is man enough to grow a beard.”

“Do you know where Theophilus lived?”

“Do I know where he lived? With me, sir. I’m his wife.”

***

The residence she claimed to have shared with John’s stepfather was a room in a tenement situated behind a looming building whose strong odor penetrated every corner and identified its trade as that of a tannery.

“We were married last year, or was it the year before?” she said, lighting a lamp set on the floor beside a rusted brazier. “I forget. Of course, he will deny it. In any event, what do you know about the swine?”

“I thought you were going to give me information, not the other way round?”

“Well, my personal charms are somewhat faded and I had to say something to get you here, didn’t I? He’s deserted me and I want to find him. He took some jewelry of mine.”

John wondered if she were more interested in finding the man or her jewelry. “I see. But he hasn’t deserted you, he-”

A flush of anger darkened her pallid face. “What do you mean? Do you know something I don’t? Gone off with another woman is it, gave her my jewelry?”

“He has not deserted you or anyone else. He’s dead.”

“So you say.”

“I do say. Believe me, Theophilus is dead. I saw his body myself.”

She went silent. The set of her mouth made it obvious she was more angry that the man she claimed was her husband had managed to escape her wrath. “Didn’t happen to have my jewelry on him when you found him, did he?”

John shook his head.

“You weren’t really looking for him then?”

“Only for anything I can find out about him.”

“Well, this is where he lived. That must be worth something.”