When the bird flew and made its kill, she was not part of it, and did not see what it brought down, except that it had come from the city, and knew nothing of its death.
Later, in the afternoon, Hypatia excused herself from the palace, from the claustrophobia of attendants and guards and stewards and maids and slaves and minor royalty, away from the perfumed, incensed air, away from the flower garden and the fruit garden and the beast garden and the swimming pool with its views of the sea, and walked along the long, open streets to the city, to the fruit market she had passed through the previous day.
As she left, she found that Polyphemos wished her to have a guard, which was astonishing considering he had gone to such remarkable lengths to prevent her from seeing Queen Berenice when she had first arrived. Now that she had seen the queen, it seemed, he regarded her as his personal responsibility and pressed on her an escort from palace Watch.
Thus she went among the sellers of cherries and citrus, of plums and melons, dried dates and figs, of almonds and olives and oils thereof, and wove through the stalls in the suffocating company of Agathon and Amyntas, who attempted conversation in the first hour and abandoned it thereafter, growing ever more sullen as the heat baked their mail and their helms and their hands in their leather gloves.
They did not know Pantera, and so did not know to look closely as she dropped a purse of silver coins in front of a particular vendor, to buy a small glazed mug containing his speciality of roasted almonds done in honey and minted oil, with shredded marigolds sprinkled over. They did not see the pickpocket who removed her purse from the vendor’s open belt pouch and returned it again shortly thereafter, nor did they notice when the pickpocket’s accomplice nodded to her as she traversed the next aisle, eating the almonds, sharing them with her guards out of pity.
She returned to the stifling palace feeling elated and irritable together. There was a time when, had the god allowed, she would have hated Pantera. That time was gone; in Alexandria and then Rome, she had seen the valleys and height of his soul and had found in herself a measure of respect that was granted to few in her life. She was not yet sure if she counted Pantera a friend, but she had been genuinely glad to see him and Mergus, had met their eyes and smiled at them covertly across the sea of strangers’ faces, and their smiles, covertly returned, had felt like splashes of colour in a grey winter’s day.
She gave the remains of her almonds to Polyphemos, who flushed an unfetching crimson. Leaving him, Hypatia went to see to the two hounds, Night and Day, who greeted her with joy, and had never yet brought her grief.
Chapter Nine
‘ Our enemy holds… has… the ear of the king. The royal family thinks… expects to leave for Jerusalem in secret by his order. Soon. I go where they go. Beware Iksahra, the king’s falconer. She’s signed it with the lily and the hound.’
Mergus was proud of the speed of his decoding, done without slate or paper. ‘Hypatia’s gift was accepted,’ he said. ‘She’s in.’
He and Pantera sat in a pungent fisherman’s tavern three blocks inland from the harbour, far enough from the side door for the smell of newly gutted fish from the day’s catch not to reach them, but not so far that the sea breeze could not keep the air clean.
They ate unleavened bread and olives and watered wine and, in their shadowed corner, with no one close enough to overhear or oversee, they ate fragments of Hypatia’s papyrus softened in the wine and rolled into pellets and fitted into the hollow core of an olive.
It was a drover’s dream of a meal and it was as drovers they ate and drank and talked, loudly and at length of the horses they dreamed of owning, the camels they would like to buy, the likelihood of a new train’s leaving Caesarea and where it might go. Never once did they look over their shoulders at Kleitos, the bearded Cypriot whose efforts to follow them had grown less subtle over the days. He had at least two accomplices in the tavern. Both had finished their meals and were sitting alone, pretending to drink wine.
Presently, as the watchers dulled towards sleep, Mergus leaned towards Pantera and murmured, ‘What next, and where?’
Pantera drained his wine, tipping the last dribble on to the table, as an offering to the watching gods. ‘We need to contact Seneca’s agent at the Temple of Tyche. First, we have to lose Kleitos and his idiot friends.’ He belched and leaned forward, planting both palms on the table so his mouth was by Mergus’ ear. He grinned, loosely. ‘If you could pretend affection, we might slip upstairs. There’s a room with a window overlooking the stables. Saulos was always a prude. There’s a reasonable chance that the men who follow him are the same.’
In so many ways, Pantera was wise. In a few, he was completely blind. Against the sudden turmoil in his chest, Mergus leaned over and kissed Pantera on the cheek, and laughed and ruffled his hair and, standing, made a slurred observation just too loudly for privacy.
He left the room with Pantera’s hand on his shoulder, both of them swaying with the evident effects of drink. Nobody followed them up the stairs.
Tyche, protector-goddess to the city of Caesarea, was wealthy. Images of her in Greek and Roman form were set atop marbled plinths flanking the broad, paved pathway that led to her temple. On its porch, a flame burned in a shining bronze brazier tended by three white-clad priests who ranged in age from a sweating novice through a twitchy lay member of the city’s council to a white-haired sage who leaned over the fire as if nothing else in the world was deserving of his attention.
His face was a dull liverish red from the constant heat, and the skin pulled tight about the frame of his skull. His eyes were yellowed at the whites and clouded at the centres.
Leaving Mergus at the foot of the steps, Pantera mounted with due solemnity towards the brazier. He felt in his belt pouch and found the offerings he had brought from Rome. According to a code laid down when he was a child and long before he had been recruited to the service of his emperor, he laid dried thyme, mint and sage one at a time on the flames.
Three threads of smoke sweetened the afternoon air. The novice stared at him in vapid resentment of his intrusion and the added work it might bring. The lay councillor kept his eyes on the skyline, too preoccupied with the threads of riot-smoke rising there to acknowledge his existence. But the sage stepped away from the heat, motioning for Pantera to follow him across the porch to the temple’s inner cool.
A wash of pale afternoon light kept the place from true darkness. From round a corner, the brazier sent sweet smoke to freshen the air. Pantera sank to his heels with his back to the wall, closed his eyes and murmured the invocation to the god; his god, not Tyche.
‘The journey was long?’ The old priest’s voice was thin as his skin, a paper, sawed across a reed. Still, he spoke the words Pantera needed to hear, and waited for the right answer.
‘As long as my life.’
‘You will go longer still.’
‘I intend to.’
Seneca had always made his greeting-tests simple: in their brevity was their accuracy, and so their assurance of safety. The priest slid his arms into his sleeves. The lines on his face softened, like old leather laid in water. He said, ‘Your master is dead.’
Pantera nodded, wordless. Each man said it as if it must be news; perhaps to them it was.
‘I hear he was allowed to take his own life.’
‘Nero is merciful,’ Pantera said, which was true. The others had not been granted such mercy. It was said that the wife of Piso, the chief conspirator, killed herself on the second day of her questioning, when she was being carried from the cells to the place of torture in a litter, her leg bones having been broken in so many places on the first day that she could not walk.